we make markets. worldwide
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Mes
se F
rank
furt
An
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al
Re
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Messe Frankfurt GmbHLudwig-Erhard-Anlage 160327 Frankfurt am MainGermany
Telephone +49 69 75 75-0Telefax +49 69 75 75-64 33www.messefrankfurt.cominfo@messefrankfurt.com
Imprint
Editors-in-chief
Klaus Münster-Müller Gabriele Wehrl
Editor
Ralf Schirrmann
Responsible for content
Dr Jens Schreiber
Translation
Jan Wheeler B.A. (Hons) BDÜ,Saarbrücken
Photography
Norbert Miguletz
With the exception of the photos on pages:Vincenzo Mancuso: 4, 5Messe Frankfurt GmbH: 21, 29, 35
Concept and design
thema communications ag,Frankfurt am Main
Publisher
Messe Frankfurt Medien undService GmbH, Frankfurt am Main
Druckhaus BeckerOber-Ramstadt
Paper
Inside pages: Curtis by Curtis 1.3, 135 g/m2
Cover: Curtis by Curtis 1.3, 360 g/m2
von Römerturm Feinstpapier
Print run
2,500 in two editions (German and English)
Editorial team address
Messe Frankfurt GmbHCorporate PublishingLudwig-Erhard-Anlage 160327 Frankfurt am MainGermanyTelephone +49 69 75 75-56 25Telefax +49 69 75 75-67 60press@messefrankfurt.com
Messe Frankfurt group at a glance
Shareholders: City of Frankfurt (60%), State of Hesse (40%)
Subscribed capital: City of Frankfurt e 108 m, State of Hesse e 72 m
in g m 2000 2001 2002 2003 2004
Sales 311 318 335 353 364
Personnel expenses 45 52 58 69 70
Depreciation, amortisation and write-downs 30 45 47 47 62
Earnings before taxes 46 40 32 23 33
Pre-tax return on sales in % 15 13 10 7 9
Net income for the year 22 28 22 10 19
Cash flow 52 65 67 53 78
Additions to fixed assets 188 138 43 40 34
Equity 283 299 312 315 320
Total assets 691 701 789 706 732
Employees (at 31.12. respectively) 851 984 1,144 1,213 1,227
2000 2001 2002 2003 2004
Basic data
Total area (m2) 475,000 475,000 475,000 475,000 475,000
Available covered space (m2) 289,931 324,023 324,041 324,225 324,277
Available open space (m2) 75,762 89,408 83,163 83,163 83,163
Number of halls 10 10 10 10 10
Events in Germany
Number of trade fairs and exhibitions 46 38 51 52 50
Exhibitors (total) 43,088 36,089 39,777 45,220 42,231
Exhibitors (Germany) 20,529 16,985 17,240 19,619 17,031
Exhibitors (foreign) 22,559 19,104 22,537 25,601 25,200
Visitors 1,680,255 2,185,817 1,609,107 2,713,619 1,586,766
Net area (m2) 1,612,502 1,443,596 1,428,555 1,616,859 1,417,486
Events overseas
Number of trade fairs 43 48 45 60 59
Exhibitors 7,136 7,412 9,812 13,345 15,486
Visitors 609,532 584,085 803,527 760,746 750,330
Net area (m2) 176,264 196,041 217,993 293,572 322,736
Corporate Group
The Messe Frankfurt corporate group conceives, plans and hosts trade fairsand exhibitions in Germany and abroad. The parent company and its sub-sidiaries offer a well-coordinated service package for national and interna-tional customers, exhibitors and visitors.
Annual Report 2004
We make markets. Worldwide.
Guadalajara
Trade fair venues worldwide
Las Vegas
São Paulo
Mexico City
Buenos Aires
Atlanta
New York
Vancouver
Paris
Frankfurt
AugsburgDüsseldorf
HamburgKarlsruhe
CologneMainz
MunichNuremberg
OffenbachSindelfingen
StuttgartWiesbaden
St. Petersburg
Moscow
Abu Dhabi
New Delhi
Beijing
SeoulTokyo
Shanghai
GuangzhouHong Kong
Chicago
Baltimore
EdinburghToronto
Istanbul
Dubai
Mumbai
Kuala Lumpur
Nagoya
Busan
Chiba
Guangzhou International Lighting
Exhibition + Electrical Building
Technology China 2005, Guangzhou
08.06.–11.06.2005Ambiente Japan, Tokyo
08.06.–10.06.2005Heimtextil Japan, Tokyo
08.06.–10.06.2005Interior Lifestyle, Tokyo
08.06.–10.06.2005ABF Franchising Expo, São Paulo
08.06.–11.06.2005Collectione, Frankfurt am Main
12.06.–15.06.2005bed and more, Frankfurt am Main
14.06.–15.06.2005Parken 2005, Wiesbaden
15.06.–16.06.2005SEGURIEXPO, Buenos Aires
21.06.–23.06.2005Expo Forestal, Guadalajara
30.06.–02.07.2005
July
PAACE Automechanika Mexico,
Mexico City
13.07.–15.07.2005Thermotec, Tokyo
13.07.–15.07.2005Interior Lifestyle USA, Las Vegas
26.07.–29.07.2005Ambiente USA, Las Vegas
26.07.–29.07.2005Heimtextil USA, Las Vegas
26.07.–29.07.2005
August
SIM 2005, São Paulo
01.08.–05.08.2005Fenavem, São Paulo
01.08.–05.08.2005IT Brasil, São Paulo
16.08.–19.08.2005Ambiente Buenos Aires,
Buenos Aires
18.08.–21.08.2005
Intertextile Shanghai Home Textiles,
Shanghai
23.08.–25.08.2005Tendence Lifestyle,
Frankfurt am Main
26.08.-30.08.2005
September
Expo Ferretera, Buenos Aires
01.09.–04.09.2005EMT, Mexico City
06.09.–08.09.2005Techtextil Rossija, Moscow
07.09.–09.09.2005Interstoff Rossija, Moscow
07.09.–09.09.2005IAA, Frankfurt am Main
15.09.–25.09.2005Cosmesur, Buenos Aires
16.09.–19.09.2005Texworld, Paris
19.09.–22.09.2005Ambiente Rossija, Moscow
21.09.–24.09.2005Christmasworld Rossija, Moscow
21.09.–24.09.2005Heimtextil Rossija, Moscow
21.09.–24.09.2005
October
Media-Tech Showcase & Conference,
Frankfurt am Main
04.10.–05.10.2005Plastic Electronics International
Conference & Showcase,
Frankfurt am Main
04.10.–05.10.2005Interstoff Asia Autumn, Hong Kong
05.10.–07.10.2005Heimtextil India, Mumbai
10.10.–13.10.2005Music China, Shanghai
19.10.–22.10.2005Prolight + Sound Shanghai, Shanghai
19.10.–22.10.2005Frankfurt Book Fair,
Frankfurt am Main
19.10.–23.10.2005
Canadian Waste & Recycling Expo,
Vancouver
26.10.–27.10.2005Auto + Automechanika
St. Petersburg, St. Petersburg
26.10.–30.10.2005Intertextile Shanghai Apparel
Fabrics, Shanghai
27.10.–29.10.2005Marathon Mall, Frankfurt am Main
28.10.–30.10.2005
November/December
BIEL Light + Building, Buenos Aires
01.11.–05.11.2005Eurolipids, Frankfurt am Main
02.11.–04.11.2005Paperworld USA, Las Vegas
09.11.–11.11.2005Texcare Asia, Beijing
10.11.–12.11.2005Material Vision, Frankfurt am Main
10.11.–11.11.2005Product Life, Mainz
15.–16.11.2005Linux World Conference & Expo,
Frankfurt am Main
15.11.–17.11.2005European Banking & Insurance Fair,
Frankfurt am Main
15.11.–17.11.2005Paperworld China, Shanghai
15.11.–17.11.2005Expo Transporte, Guadalajara
16.11.–18.11.2005Techtextil South America, São Paulo
22.11.–24.11.2005SPS/IPC/Drives, Nuremberg
22.11.–24.11.2005Automechanika China, Beijing
23.11.–26.11.2005EuroMold, Frankfurt am Main
30.11.–03.12.2005turntec, Frankfurt am Main
30.11.–03.12.2005
At: 30.04.2005
January
Hong Kong International Stationery
Fair, Hong Kong
11.01.–14.01.2005Heimtextil, Frankfurt am Main
12.01.–15.01.2005Intersec, Dubai
15.01.–17.01.2005Paperworld, Frankfurt am Main
26.01.–30.01.2005Christmasworld, Frankfurt am Main
26.01.–30.01.2005Beautyworld, Frankfurt am Main
26.01.–30.01.2005
February
Ambiente, Frankfurt am Main
11.02.–15.02.2005Hardware + Home Improvement
Expo & Conference, Toronto
20.02.–22.02.2005Personal 2005, Frankfurt am Main
23.02.–24.02.2005Extruma, Frankfurt am Main
23.02.–25.02.2005
March
Texworld, Paris
08.03.–11.03.2005Fur & Fashion, Frankfurt am Main
09.03.–12.03.2005Ambiente Buenos Aires, Buenos Aires
10.03.–13.03.2005ISH, Frankfurt am Main
15.03.–19.03.2005EMV, Stuttgart
15.03.–17.03.2005PCIM, Shanghai
15.03.–17.03.2005Lifetime Kongress,
Frankfurt am Main
17.03.–19.03.2005Interstoff Asia Spring, Hong Kong
21.03.–23.03.2005
Source It, Hong Kong
21.03.–23.03.2005Yarn Expo, Beijing
29.03.–31.03.2005Intertextile Beijing Apparel Fabrics,
Beijing
30.03.–01.04.2005
April
Automechanika Asia, Kuala Lumpur
06.04.–09.04.2005Musikmesse, Frankfurt am Main
06.04.–09.04.2005Prolight + Sound, Frankfurt am Main
06.04–09.04.2005Construct Light+Building, Abu Dhabi
10.04.–13.03.2005IMEX, Frankfurt am Main
19.04.–21.04.2005Facility Management,
Frankfurt am Main
19.04.–21.04.2005SMT/Hybrid/Packaging, Nuremberg
19.04.–21.04.2005Automechanika Istanbul, Istanbul
21.04.–24.04.2005Petroleum Istanbul, Istanbul
21.04.–24.04.2005ITeG, Frankfurt am Main
26.04.–28.04.2005Art Frankfurt, Frankfurt am Main
29.04.–02.05.2005
May
Beauty World Middle East Gulf
Beauty, Dubai
02.05.–04.05.2005Wellness & Spa Middle East, Dubai
02.05.–04.05.2005Seoul International Consumer Goods
Fair, Seoul
04.05.–07.05.2005Beautyworld Japan, Tokyo
09.05.–11.05.2005
Intima Japan, Tokyo
09.05.–11.05.2005Marketing Services,
Frankfurt am Main
10.05.–12.05.2005Media-Tech Expo, Las Vegas
10.05.–11.05.2005Materials Handling, Dubai
15.05.–17.05.2005ISH Kitchen + Bathroom Gulf,
Dubai
15.05.–17.05.2005Lightstyle Gulf Light, Dubai
15.05.–17.05.2005Garden, Landscaping & Outdoor
Living, Dubai
15.05.–17.05.2005Hardware & Tools, Dubai
15.05.–17.05.2005Hometech, Dubai
15.05.–17.05.2005Hair & Beauty International,
Frankfurt am Main
22.05.–23.05.2005SPS Electric Automation America,
Chicago
24.05.–26.05.2005Automechanika Gulf, Dubai
28.05.–30.05.2005Housewares & Homestyle Middle
East, Dubai
28.05.–30.05.2005Middle East Toy Fair, Dubai
28.05.–30.05.2005
June
Techtextil, Frankfurt am Main
07.06.–09.06.2005Avantex, Frankfurt am Main
07.06.–09.06.2005PCIM, Nuremberg
07.06.–09.06.2005Korean Railways & Logistics Fair,
Busan
08.06.–11.06.2005
Trade fairs in 2005
The Messe Frankfurt corporate group, one of the world’s leading
exhibition corporations, organises more than 100 trade fairs
worldwide and is one of the few global players in the trade fair
sector. The basis for its success are a portfolio of showcase events,
the third largest exhibition complex in the world and an extensive
network of subsidiaries, branch offices and foreign agencies.
1
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Management editorial
4 Structures for tomorrow’s success
Planning Success throughout the year
9 Positive balance in 200411 Four roads to growth
Shaping Scope for dynamism and progress
17 Consumer goods fairs take the lead 22 Textiles fairs – fabrics for high-tech, the home and fashion26 Technical fairs with fascination potential32 More guest fairs come to Frankfurt34 More company events in the Festhalle35 Messe Frankfurt augments congress business36 Overall activities of Messe Frankfurt 2004
Acting Growth through motivation and commitment
47 Success factor human resources policy
Management report and
financial statements Group Management Report Messe Frankfurt GmbH
53 I. Business trend63 II. Situation report73 III. Risk management74 IV. Outlook
Annual Financial Statements of the Messe Frankfurt GmbH Group
76 Consolidated balance sheet78 Consolidated income statement79 Explanatory notes to the 2004 consolidated financial statements94 Auditor‘s report
96 Report of the Supervisory Board
97 Supervisory Board of Messe Frankfurt GmbH
Additional information 99 Trade fairs in 2004Trade fairs in 2005 Contact details, Imprint
Contents
32
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Michael von Zitzewitz,
Chairman of the Board of Management
Uwe Behm,
General Manager
Detlef Braun,
Member of the Board of Management
Parallel to expanding our operationsin Germany and abroad, we musttherefore also further develop ourinternal corporate structures. Just aswe permanently analyse the viability,critically appraise, optimise andadapt our trade fairs to the marketsof the future, we must also do thesame with our internal structures andprocesses and our conduct. Aboveall, we want to make better use ofthe extensive know-how that existson all corporate levels – to the bene-fit of our customers. In the autumnof 2004, with a series of workshopsdirected at our employees, we initiatedan exciting and very dynamic processaimed – by analogy with the principleof lifelong learning of the individual– at making Messe Frankfurt a con-tinuously learning organisation.
At the same time, 2004 saw the launchof our modernisation programme forthe Frankfurt exhibition grounds.The acquisition of a piece of land ofaround 100,000 square metres pavedthe way for redesigning the westernsection of the grounds. Work wasstarted in 2005 on the traffic infra-structure, which it is hoped will becompleted by mid-2007, in time forthe IAA.
Depending which model is realised,the plans foresee the construction oftwo or three new halls on the newsite, enabling older halls to be mod-ernised. However, expanding the netexhibition space is not on the agen-da, especially since the German andEuropean trade fair sector is alreadyburdened by massive over-capacities.
Editorial
Despite a still sluggish economy andcontinuing consumer reticence, MesseFrankfurt more than held its own in2004. This may in part have beenassisted by world trade, which withnine per cent recorded the third high-est rise in the past ten years, gener-ating a favourable climate for MesseFrankfurt’s largely internationally-oriented activities.
The benchmark data for our eventsremained stable compared to theprevious years’ figures. Some tradefairs such as Paperworld, Beauty-world and Texcare were able onceagain to register growing interest onthe part of German exhibitors, otherssuch as Christmasworld and Prolight+ Sound posted two-digit growthrates on the visitor side. This aboveall was due to the internationalism ofthe Frankfurt fairs.
We also have every reason to be sat-isfied with the development of ouroverseas operations. The number ofparticipating exhibitors attending theapproximately 60 trade fairs stagedoutside Germany was the highestever. More than half of these eventswere held in Asia, 14 of those alonein China, in what is currently theworld’s most dynamic market. Asiawill continue in the future to be acore area of concentration for ourforeign activities, although despite
this, we will not lose sight of otherpromising markets. For 2005, we areable to announce two new consumergoods and textiles shows in theattractive but difficult US Americanmarket – a promising start to theyear that we intend to build on withcircumspection.
With our new group structure, com-pleted in 2004, we have set the coursefor the future. Splitting the group intoan operating company (Messe Frank-furt Exhibition) and a property man-agement company (Messe FrankfurtVenue), under the umbrella of aholding company, has created moretransparency and room for manoeuvre,which will be the basis for furthergrowth. Broadening the internationalscope of our activities in a goal-orientedway, strategic alliances, new tradefairs at home and abroad as well asdeveloping new spheres of activityare the four roads to growth we willconcentrate on in the years to come.
To enable the new structures todevelop their full potential, they mustbe filled with life, in particular by thosepeople who move within these struc-tures and are in direct day-to-day con-tact with our customers. These people,our employees, are in the truestsense of the word the face MesseFrankfurt presents to its customers andpartners.
Management editorial –
Structures for tomorrow’s success
4
Dr Michael Peters,
Member of the Board of Management
The modernisation of the trade faircomplex will increase the attractive-ness and competitiveness of theFrankfurt venue. It forms the basisfor continued profitable growth andfurther expansion of our position onthe world market. Above all, thecompetence and the dedication ofour employees make us confidentthat we will achieve our goals.
5
Messe Frankfurt is already laying the foun-
dation for the trade fairs of tomorrow. The
future starts today – in Frankfurt and at more
than 40 venues around the world. Like this,
the company is also creating enduring values
for coming generations. Its strong position
on the international trade fair market benefits
exhibitors and visitors as well as the city and
state and Messe Frankfurt’s employees.
Responsibly planned growth is an investment
in the future.
6 7
1
109 trade fairs and exhibitions
worldwide, 237 congresses, confer-
ences and events, more than 57,700
exhibitors and nearly 2.9 million visi-
tors – this is the balance of events of
Messe Frankfurt and its German and
foreign subsidiaries in 2004. Group
sales climbed to a new record of
g 364.5 million, earnings before taxes
were up almost 44 per cent on last
year at g 33.5 million. Although the
economic environment was anything
but encouraging, Messe Frankfurt held
its own in the 2004 business year.
Frankfurt was the venue for 41 tradefairs including 16 organised by MesseFrankfurt Exhibition GmbH, four byMesse Frankfurt Ausstellungen GmbHand one by Mesago Messe FrankfurtGmbH. These 21 own events recordedmore than 26,000 exhibitors. Morethan 17,600 of these came fromabroad and were able to compensatethe slight decline in the number ofGerman exhibitors. At 68 per centand 35 per cent respectively, theshare of foreign exhibitors and visi-tors reached a new record. A total of 973,000 visitors attended MesseFrankfurt’s own events in Frankfurt, 18 per cent more than in 2003. Thenet leased area was more than 18 percent higher than in 2003 at about 1.1 million square metres. The calen-dar at the Frankfurt venue featured
20 guest events, including successfulclassics like the Book Fair and EuroMold. Although the big crowd-puller IAA was missing by rotation inthe year under review, guest fairsattracted a total of 13,300 exhibitorsand more than 530,000 visitors.
With 136 events and 108,000 visitors,the 2004 conference year was –alongside 2001, the year of the GermanKirchentag (Church Congress) – thebest year in terms of sales and totalnumber of events since the CongressCenter was opened in 1997. TheFrankfurt Festhalle venue hosted 58cultural and sporting events, companypresentations and gala evenings witha total of more than 419,000 visitors.
The German event subsidiaries MesseFrankfurt Ausstellungen GmbH,Wiesbaden, and Mesago MesseFrankfurt GmbH, Stuttgart, staged atotal of 14 fairs in 2004, which wereattended by 3,300 exhibitors and morethan 130,000 visitors. Five of thesetrade fairs were held in 2004 at theFrankfurt venue, the remainder at var-ious other venues in Germany.
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1➔
Success throughout the year
Positive balance in 2004
Planning
Messe Frankfurt can look back on a good
exhibition year. Together with its subsidiaries
and branch offices around the globe, it
increased sales and earnings and reinforced
its position in the international trade fair
sector. With its new group structure and
investments in the infrastructure of the
Frankfurt home venue, Messe Frankfurt is
already setting the stage for tomorrow’s
performances.
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10
Positive balance in 2004
Profitable growth continues to be a
focus of Messe Frankfurt’s strategic
concept. By systematically examin-
ing all the options, the company has
identified four roads to growth.
■ Broadening international scope
Broadening the international scope inthe world’s dynamic growth regionsis one road that Messe Frankfurtidentified early on and has sincepursued with great success. Thereare two aspects to this: first, bycanvassing exhibitors and attract-ing visitors, the worldwide market-ing organisation secures businessat the Frankfurt venue. As a result,Frankfurt has the highest level ofinternationalism in terms of bothexhibitors and visitors. Second, tradefairs exported to promising marketsgenerate own growth. Like this,Messe Frankfurt’s foreign businesshas trebled since 1999 to e 74 mil-lion in 2004.
■ Alliances
Europe continues to be the numberone trade fair continent in the world;however, it is a highly developedand sophisticated market. In thismarket, ”go-it-alone“ strategies arenot necessarily the most meaning-ful way of assuring success. Growthcannot and must not always come byone’s own efforts alone. With its newmore flexible organisational struc-ture, Messe Frankfurt has openedup new perspectives, providing
scope for possible partnershipsand alliances. The restructuringprocess of the group begun in 2003was completed in the autumn of2004 with the spin-off of the oper-ating company Messe FrankfurtExhibition GmbH. This follows theestablishment of Messe FrankfurtVenue GmbH & Co. KG, which is incharge of leasing, construction andinfrastructure of the Frankfurt exhi-bition centre as well as providingservices. The new company isresponsible for our own events athome and abroad as well as theGerman and foreign subsidiaries.Under the roof of a joint holdingcompany, Messe Frankfurt GmbH,two independent companies eachwith its own core competencies have thus been created. The taskfor the years ahead is to sound outthe possibilities that this new mod-el offers both at the event and atthe corporate level.
11
1Planning
➔
Four paths to further growth
Significant increase in sales
and earnings
At around e 364.5 million (2003: e 353.3 million), group sales climbedto a new record high. Foreign sales, uparound 31 per cent on 2003 at e 73.7million, contributed with 20 per centto the company’s success. The main-stays of sales were the subsidiaries inHong Kong/China (e 22.1 million), Paris(e 10.6 million), Atlanta (e 7.8 million)and Tokyo (e 6.4 million).
At e 33.5 million, earnings before taxeswere also up by almost 44 per cent onlast year (e 23 million). Apart from the increase in sales of e 11.2 millionand other operating income (+ e 6.4million), this could be explained byreductions in general administrativeexpenses (– e 6.4 million) and analmost constant level of expenses forevents and personnel. EBITDA (earn-ings before interest, taxes, deprecia-tion and amortisation) rose to a new high of over e 95 million (2003:e 71.2 million).
Eleven new trade fairs
outside Germany
The development of foreign businesswas particularly encouraging with atotal of 59 trade fairs in 2004, includingeleven new events, held in twelvecountries in Europe, Asia and theAmericas. Messe Frankfurt is tradi-tionally most strongly represented inAsia, which accounted for a total of33 trade fairs, 14 of these alone inChina and Hong Kong. Some 15,500companies participated at the foreigntrade fairs – 16 per cent more thanlast year; leased area grew by aroundten per cent to 322,700 square metres,although in 2003 one more eventtook place. Over 750,000 visitors wererecorded.
Although Asia will continue in thefuture to be a focus of the company’soverseas strategy, other interestingmarkets will nevertheless not be neglected. In 2005, Messe Frankfurt islaunching two new trade fairs on theAmerican market: Interior LifestyleUSA with the brands Ambiente andHeimtextil and Paperworld USA. Bothevents are being staged in Las Vegas.
12
Four paths to further growth
■ Innovations
New products are the business oftomorrow and the basis for futuregrowth. Successfully launching newtrade fairs on the market is, however,very difficult under the prevailingconditions – especially in the largelysaturated German and Europeanevent markets. There are neverthe-less still themes capable of devel-opment, for example innovativematerials and technologies, as pre-sented at Material Vision. Interpret-ing an established industry from anew angle can also lead to a newtrade fair: thus in 2005, Collectionewill debut, a consumer goods tradefair that is not oriented towardsproducts and sectors, but towardsthe targeted visitor groups – large-scale buyers. Messe Frankfurt willlaunch eight new trade fairs in 2005 – four at the Frankfurt tradefair venue and four abroad.
■ Diversification
Via its Messe Frankfurt Medien undService GmbH (MFS) subsidiary,Messe Frankfurt already sells sup-plementary trade fair-related prod-ucts to exhibitors. Apart fromadvertising media, it offers tradefair stands, publishing productssuch as trade fair publications and,since 2004, catalogues. It is intend-ed to expand these activities in thefuture. Plans include, for example,an extensive series of seminars forexhibitors under the motto “Fromprofessionals for professionals”.Information events relating to spe-cific markets, such as the JapanDay, are also in the pipeline. Likethis, Messe Frankfurt will be utilis-ing the expertise acquired overmany years to offer its customersan extended service.
Modernisation of the exhibition
grounds creates a competitive edge
Messe Frankfurt’s modernisationplans for the exhibition complex aregeared not so much towards increas-ing space as towards significantlyimproving quality. The land pur-chased to the west of the site inAugust 2004 will be used to housenew halls, which will successivelyreplace the older halls. The plannednew construction will not result inany change in overall hall space. Thefirst building phase is scheduled tobegin with Hall 11 in 2006, and con-struction work is expected to be
completed by 2009. The first meas-ures to optimise the traffic routingconcept will be implemented in 2005.
Enjoy your stay! – Messe Frankfurt’s
new services
In 2004, special trains were for thefirst time put on for the Paperworld,Ambiente and Tendence Lifestyletrade fairs, and for Beautyworld,groups of visitors were brought tothe trade fair by chartered coach. Theall-in deals at an attractive all-inclu-sive price include transport, entranceticket and catalogue as well as theorganisation of the trip with guidefrom the station to the exhibitiongrounds.
Following the “Rhine-Main HotelGuide”, which was published in itssecond year in 2004, and the cooper-ation with Tourism + Congress GmbHas an accommodation service andTravel2Fairs as a package tour opera-tor, Messe Frankfurt has thus takenthe next logical step.
The new services are intended tomake travelling to the exhibitiongrounds and the stay in Frankfurteven more agreeable and uncompli-cated for exhibitors and visitors inthe future.
Another step in the same direction isthe introduction of online tickets. Vis-itors can now order tickets onlineand print them out themselves from
the comfort of their home and at adiscounted price. That saves bothprecious time when visiting the tradefair and money, because ticketsbought in advance are cheaper thanat the ticket counter.
With the help of state-of-the-art datatechnology, Messe Frankfurt ensuresthat up-to-the-minute information isavailable across the entire site: W-LAN (Wireless Local Area Network)allows exhibitors and visitors accessto the Internet in all halls and theoutdoor areas.
The “PDA Trade Fair Guide” is a digitalinformation package that for everyfair contains a full list of exhibitors plusa plan of the grounds, displays currentevent-related information and offersthe possibility for visitors to compiletheir own route around the fair. ThePDA Trade Fair Guide is availablefree for download on the Internet orat special data vending stations duringthe trade fair.
13
1Planning
➔
■ New services in 2005
From summer 2005: personalisedbadges for all trade fair visitors offerthe possibility to hand over digitalisedbusiness cards to exhibitors.
Opening of a new Business Centre inthe Torhaus Service Center. Here, allbusiness services such as translations,copy/print shop, PC support are offeredat one central point.
Organised city tours of Frankfurt tocultural highlights, the most famousskyscrapers or to Sachsenhausen for a glass of local apple wine – bring theexhibition day to a harmonious closewith impressions of Frankfurt.
As a partner to its exhibitors, visitors and
trade fair organisers, Messe Frankfurt is
open to the diversity of the world. At its
trade fair venue in Frankfurt, it offers scope
for shaping and staging. Successful presen-
tations and good contacts are the basis for
economic success. They help to open up
new markets and provide a breakthrough for
innovations. The things that enrich our life
today were new exhibits at a trade fair yes-
terday. The two million-plus guests from all
over the world who travel to Frankfurt every
year will find a hospitable welcome in an
international metropolis. We bring people
together and help to shape ideas.
15
2
14
Shaping
In 2004, the Messe Frankfurt group and its
German and foreign subsidiaries staged
109 trade fairs around the globe. A total of
41 events were held at the Frankfurt trade
fair venue, including 16 own events. Ex-
hibitors, visitors and leased exhibition space
were all up compared to the previous year.
Messe Frankfurt traditionally stages
the largest consumer goods trade
fairs in the world. Some 600,000
trade visitors around the globe at-
tend the six key brands Ambiente,
Tendence Lifestyle, Paperworld,
Christmasworld, Beautyworld and
Musikmesse every year.
Ambiente is the leading internationaltrade fair for ordering business atthe beginning of the year and attractssome 140,000 trade visitors from allover the world to the Main regionevery year. In 2004, with more than190,000 square metres of net leasedarea, it was the largest own event ofall time in terms of area to be held atthe Frankfurt trade fair venue. Twonew product areas were introduced– Outdoor, featuring products forgarden, patio and balcony living, andsmall electrical appliances.
Tendence Lifestyle in Frankfurt, thesecond-largest consumer goods fairin the world and number one for theautumn/winter season and Christmastrade, established itself on the marketwith its new concept. Over 3,700 ex-hibitors and more than 91,000 tradevisitors proved to the organisers in2004 that with the new orientationtowards lifestyle worlds they are righton track.
However, it is not size alone that determines the lead role of Ambienteand Tendence Lifestyle, but aboveall the quality of the exhibiting com-panies and the trade visitors. Thou-sands of new products are present-ed in the halls, and internationalmanufacturers of glassware, porce-lain, ceramics, furniture, gift articles,kitchen accessories and accessoriesfor the home display their wares totraders from all over the world. Thecreative driving force of the con-sumer goods industry are above allsmall and medium-sized enterprises.And it is they in particular that bene-fit from Ambiente as a platform forestablishing contacts to foreign buy-ers, as they are often lacking inter-national marketing channels. FiveAmbiente trade fairs abroad providepossibilities for developing newmarkets:■ under the umbrella brand Interior
Lifestyle – together with HeimtextilJapan and Home Design Japan –Ambiente Japan in Tokyo,
■ Ambiente Rossija in association withChristmasworld Rossija in Moscow,
■ in 2004 for the first time AmbienteBuenos Aires in Argentina with twoshows in the calendar year,
■ in Korea the Seoul InternationalConsumer Goods Fair.
■ For 2005, it is planned to hold Interior Lifestyle USA with AmbienteUSA and Heimtextil USA in LasVegas.
Scope for dynamism and progress
Consumer goods fairs take the lead
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■ New special trade fair for
consumer goods
Collectione will be launched in 2005 asthe first consumer goods trade fair inFrankfurt specifically for the bulk-buy-ing market segment. The offer encom-passes the segments “Table, Kitchen& Houseware”, “Interiors & Decora-tion”, “Gifts & Season” as well as“Garden & Accessories”. At the earliestpossible date in the year, from 12 to15 June, it invites trade buyers fromall forms of bulk marketing practisedby trade and industry to Frankfurt toplace orders for the collections of thefollowing spring/summer season. Collectione thus enhances the range ofconsumer goods fairs at Frankfurt withthe addition of a new fair tailored to theneeds of this particularly well-fundedvisitor target group.
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Trendsetter for festivals
The unrivalled profile of Christmas-world as the “trade fair of festivals”was rewarded with a record inFrankfurt am Main in 2004. Around25 per cent more visitors than 2003were counted – with the number offoreign visitors even growing by morethan 50 per cent. The trade fair forornamental and festive decorations isgaining importance as an interna-tional platform for ideas and mar-keting with trends for the upcomingfestive season. Abroad, Christmas-world has been successfully stagedin Moscow as an independent eventsince 2000. From 2004, it is beingheld in association with HeimtextilRossija and Ambiente Rossija.
Beauty fairs worldwide
Tried and tested formula retained:from January 2005, Beautyworld isagain being organised in associationwith Paperworld and Christmasworld.The idea to combine the trade fair forthe perfumeries, cosmetics, drug storeand hairdressing trade with threeother related trade events in Marchwas once again abandoned afterholding them together in 2004 infavour of the earlier ordering date forthe beauty sector in January.
The Beautyworld foreign brandsrecorded significant increases interms of exhibitor and visitor num-bers as well as net leased area.Beautyworld Japan in Tokyo evenposted a 72 per cent rise in exhibitornumbers to 565 and BeautyworldMiddle East Gulf Beauty in Dubai a44 per cent rise to 393. With CosmesurBeautyworld Buenos Aires, the brandalso became established in SouthAmerica in 2004. This is the secondconsumer goods fair after AmbienteBuenos Aires through which MesseFrankfurt is strengthening its com-mitment in Argentina.
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Consumer goods fairs take the lead
■ First Paperworld in the USA
As the first trade fair in the United States covering the entire paper, office suppliesand stationery sector, Paperworld USA – World of School, Home and Office Products– will debut from 9 to 11 November 2005 in Las Vegas. In cooperation with twostrong partners, Messe Frankfurt has realised the wish of European manufacturers’associations to create an international paper, office supplies and stationery platformfor the American continent. Together with the School, Home & Office Products Association (SHOPA) and the Spanish industrial association Propaper, Messe Frankfurtis combining international trade fair experience and branch expertise to provide anoffer specifically tailored to the American market.
than 3,000 paper, office supplies andstationery manufacturers, China is theworld’s leading producer and ex-porter in this sector. As the secondevent in this sector, Messe Frankfurtis therefore launching PaperworldChina in Shanghai in November 2005.The Hong Kong Stationery Fairlaunched four years ago recorded amore than seven per cent rise invisitor numbers in 2004 to 12,300.The fair concentrates on schoolproducts and licensing themes rele-vant for the target group of children.
The main focus of Paperworld Chinais on office supplies and office au-tomation, the most rapidly boomingsegment in the paper, office suppliesand stationery sector. This coversprinters and the respective supplies,computers and multi-media equip-ment. Shanghai being one of China’sbiggest goods distribution centres, itis the ideal location for this trade fair.
Paperworld continues to grow
Paperworld set a new record in 2004,once again topping the successful pre-vious year’s result in Frankfurt amMain. Nearly 69,000 trade visitors from115 countries filled the appointmentsbooks of the more than 2,500 exhib-itors. More than half of the visitorscame from abroad. The PaperworldImaging segment in particular, for thesecond time represented by an evenstronger presence of the printer andprinter accessories industry, found ahigh level of acceptance. The flagshipfair of the paper, office supplies andstationery sector performed exception-ally well with the conclusion of con-crete business deals and as a contactforum.
From 2005 two events in China
Overseas, the Paperworld brand isconcentrating on China. With more
and thus achieved the highest resultin its ten-year existence. New tech-nologies such as integrated mediatechnology, which centrally controlsso far independently regulated light-ing and sound systems, are generat-ing new growth in this branch. Thistheme was also a focus at the three-day Congress for Audiovisual Instal-lation Systems (CAVIS).
Success in the Middle Kingdom
The international market is continu-ing to grow in importance for themanufacturers of musical instruments.Music China held at the ShanghaiNew International Expo Centre dem-onstrated for the second time in 2004that the Chinese market for musicalinstruments is very exciting. As inFrankfurt, the sister fair Prolight +Sound Shanghai is held parallel toMusic China.
On an area totalling 34,000 squaremetres, Music China presented vir-tually every type of musical instru-ment complete with accessories.The foreign exhibitors named threereasons for their participation: in-creasing the awareness level fortheir brands and products in China,making direct sales and gaining apersonal impression of the Chinese
market. Music China successfullypositioned itself as a trade fair forthe entire Chinese market. The ma-jority of the 25,000 trade visitorstravelled to Shanghai from all theprovinces in China.
Lead strengthened around the globe
For the fourth year in sequence, theconsumer goods fairs overcame theexigencies of a stagnating market.The six major consumer goods fairsbrought together more than 420,000trade visitors in Frankfurt am Mainand another approximately 170,000 attrade fair venues abroad. The morethan 17,800 exhibiting companies atthe Frankfurt consumer goods fairsall over the world represented thecomplete international offer of theirrespective branches. With this, MesseFrankfurt has earned itself an out-standing position on the internation-al trade fair market. It is a sign of cre-ative power and the close partnershipwith industry and trade that even indifficult economic times, the Frankfurtconsumer goods fairs were able tomaintain their lead worldwide andcontinue to strengthen it through newconcepts, new ideas and stable attend-ance figures.
Stage for musical instruments and
media technology
The world of making music andstaging with audio, lighting and stagetechnology is presented at the inter-national Musikmesse and Prolight +Sound in Frankfurt am Main. Thesetogether form the number one inter-national meeting place for musicalinstruments, music and accessories aswell as for lighting, sound, stage andevent technology. The Musikmesseand the Prolight + Sound technicalfair jointly create optimal synergies,thus creating added value for tradevisitors. The 92,000 trade visitors of both flagship fairs took advantageof their visit in 2004 to conclude morebusiness deals than in the previousyear.
As the showcase for the musical in-struments industry, the Musikmesse,together with partners from the cul-tural and educational field, providedon 110,000 square metres a stagefor the industry and at the same timepresented music, the cultural assetthat unites all nations, in all its emo-tional force. With more than 200 liveconcerts, award ceremonies andspecial events, Messe Frankfurt un-derscored its commitment to pro-moting music making. The share ofinternational exhibitors and visitorscontinued to rise, with some 67 percent of exhibiting companies comingfrom abroad.
With around 27,000 visitors, Prolight+ Sound showed a rise of around 40per cent compared to the previous year
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2ShapingConsumer goods fairs take the lead
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■ Art Frankfurt attracts more visitors
With more than 28,000 visitors, the16th edition of Art Frankfurt attractedsignificantly more art enthusiasts tothe Main region in 2004 than in theprevious year despite the event’sshorter duration. The 155 exhibitorsunisonously commended the in-creased professionalism of the visitors,which was reflected in particular ingood business. The key trade fair inEurope for young art is notable for itsdistinctive, forward-looking profile.Considerable interest was generatedby the fourth edition of the non-com-mercial Curator’s Choice exhibition se-ries, which in 2004 focussed on Africa.The Art Frankfurt Prize worth e 13,000went to the Swiss Fri-Art-Centre d’ArtContemporain in Fribourg. With thisprize, Art Frankfurt supports art soci-eties as driving forces and placeswhere young people are exposed tomodern art.
Fabrics. Both trade fairs togetherwere already twice as big at theirpremière as the original parent fair.The Frankfurt principle – growththrough segmentation – once againproved to be a recipe for success. Bothproduct groups now have sufficientscope to continue their dynamic development. Moreover, the newdates take account of the differentorder rhythms for apparel fabrics andhome textiles.
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Messe Frankfurt is the biggest organ-
iser of textiles fairs worldwide. Three
strong brands provide international
forums for trade and industry: Heim-
textil, Interstoff and Techtextil. Under
these names, Messe Frankfurt organ-
ises a total of 20 textiles fairs around
the world.
The clear nomenclature of the threetextiles segments – home and com-mercially used textiles, apparel fab-rics as well as technical textiles andnon-wovens – gives exhibitors theassurance that they are presentingtheir products in an appropriateunion. Trade visitors from all over theworld can for their part be certainthat at the Heimtextil, Interstoff andTechtextil shows, the respectivebranches are internationally repre-sented. Messe Frankfurt takes ad-vantage of its close contacts to thetextiles industry and positions itstrade fairs in the markets in whichits customers are seeking to investprofitably. At the international tradefair venues in western Europe, Russia,North and South America, China andJapan, Messe Frankfurt’s brandsstand for quality and know-howamongst international textiles fairs.
The first of the year
Heimtextil in Frankfurt am Main is theinternational flagship fair for homeand commercially used textiles. What
sounds so matter-of-fact, is in factnothing less than the global range offabrics, wall and floor coverings forinterior decoration and the comfort-ably furnished home. The Heimtextilbrand has firmly established tradefairs for home and commercially usedtextiles in Japan, China, Russia andIndia and like this is helping to de-velop tomorrow’s most promisingmarkets. In Frankfurt am Main,Heimtextil at the beginning of 2004managed to give the sector someurgently required optimism for thenew business year. As the first tradefair of the year, it sets the livingtrends and stimulates the branch. Thecentral theme were new impulses forthe trade to enable it to overcome thebuying reticence of customers. Theworld’s biggest international textilestrade fair once again underscored itsstrength and importance in 2004 witharound 99,000 visitors and more than3,000 exhibitors. Around 82 per centof the exhibitors and more than halfof the visitors came from outsideGermany. Following the difficult yearin 2003, many exhibitors began to seelight at the end of the tunnel, espe-cially where entrepreneurs had pinnedtheir hopes on new ideas and newfabrics and conquered niche markets.
With the European bed forum Bed &More, Messe Frankfurt gives the bedsegment a new impetus. The con-gress at the end of June showed the
Textiles fairs – fabrics for high-tech,
the home and fashion
22
trade ways out of the market plight.The continuing difficult situation inthe bed sector, triggered by a disin-clination to buy on the one hand andthe growing strength of discountstores on the other, should accordingto Professor Volker Trommsdorf fromBerlin Technical University stimulatethe willingness of trade and industryto cooperate so that they can graspnew opportunities. In 2005, Bed &More will offer trade symposiums inthe course of the Heimtextil show.
From one make two
Three of the four non-German Heim-textil fairs are organised by MesseFrankfurt in Asia: Heimtextil Japanunder the roof of Interior Lifestyle,Heimtextil India and IntertextileShanghai Home Textiles. In China, thenew concept of Intertextile Shanghaitook off right from the start. Organ-ised since 1995 as a joint fair for homeand fashion textiles, it was present onthe market in two versions in 2004: asIntertextile Shanghai Home Textilesand as Intertextile Shanghai Apparel
■ Heimtextil goes City
Heimtextil Sunday says goodbye andclears the way for “Heimtextil goesCity”. The Sunday for the general pub-lic had since its inception in 2002 attracted more and more final con-sumers to Heimtextil. The appeal wasto experience what could not yet beseen in any shop window. From 2005,Heimtextil is now being taken intotown. “Heimtextil goes City” opensthe doors to 20 interior decorating spe-cialists in Frankfurt am Main. Visitorswere inspired by new home furnishingideas, discovered the secrets of FengShui or took home wallpapering tipsand tricks.
■ Innovation award “Textile and Contract”
The new “Textile and Contract” innovation award sponsored by the trade journal“Architektur Innenarchitektur Technischer Ausbau” (AIT) was conferred for the firsttime at Heimtextil 2004. The jury, made up of well-known architects and interior de-signers, had to judge 45 products for the furnishing of large-scale commercial projects.Fitting hospitals, hotels or aircraft with commercially used textiles poses particularchallenges. One of the most important are fire protection regulations that prescribeflame-resistant fabrics for carpets and curtains. As the highest accolade, the Textileand Contract Innovation Award went to Schmitz-Werke GmbH for their new fabricgeneration with catalytic effect and to AS Creation Tapeten AG for their wall coveringwith 3D optics, which is permeable to air, sound-absorbing and flame-resistant.
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Big market, regionally diverse
China is the world’s leading exporterof textiles and apparel, the latter witha growth rate of around nine per centa year. As big as the Chinese tex-tiles market is, it is at the same timeregionally highly diverse. For thisreason, in addition to IntertextileShanghai, which has been held since1995, Messe Frankfurt four yearsago launched Intertextile Beijing inthe north of China. The majority of themore than 16,300 trade buyers comefrom the area around the Chinesecapital. As a sounding board for thetextiles industry, they in the mean-time view the trade fair as the mostimportant event in the region for thesourcing of all manner of yarns andfabrics. In 2004 it was for the first timecomplemented by Yarn Expo, whichpresents the latest fibres and yarns.
Technical textiles in the limelight
Technical textiles are conquering evernew fields of application. Whetherin the construction industry or theautomotive sector – they find appli-cation in domains that are not usu-ally automatically associated with“fabric”. In Frankfurt they are in thelimelight and demonstrate their manypossibilities for use. As the interna-tional showcase fair, Techtextil in Frankfurt with more than 1,000
exhibitors is every two years thecollective forum for the latest devel-opments in this innovative sector. In2005, Techtextil is for the first timebeing staged together with Avantex,the international forum for innova-tive apparel fabrics. This presents theentire process chain from researchthrough to textile finishing, and addi-tionally focuses on apparel with integrated high-tech. Both fairs areaccompanied by symposia offeringaround 60 lectures. The entire spec-trum of technical textiles and thecombination of trade fair and sym-posia make Frankfurt the leadingcontact forum for research and application worldwide.
With the demand for technical tex-tiles on the rise all over the world,the Techtextil brand has in the mean-time become firmly established onthree continents. In 2004, it took theexhibitors to China for Cinte Tech-textil and to Techtextil North America.In 2005, Techtextil South America inSão Paulo and Techtextil Rossija inMoscow once again open their doors.
The Frankfurt textiles trade fair brandsoffer trade and industry shows rang-ing from traditional textiles manu-facture and processing through tostate-of-the-art high-tech textiles in allbranches of the textiles sector.
There was also change at HeimtextilIndia, which in 2004 moved fromNew Delhi to the textiles metropolisMumbai. India is the third largestcotton producer in the world afterthe USA and China. Thousands ofsmall firms produce all kinds of tex-tiles from yarns through to wholecollections. India’s gross domesticproduct grew in 2004 by 6.5 percent. The urban upper and middleclasses in particular, have growingincomes. In this economic environ-ment, the importance of HeimtextilIndia will continue to increase in theyears to come.
Fabrics for dreamlike fashions
For the past eight years, Texworld inParis has been the place where fab-rics for dreamlike fashions have beentraded. The trade fair for apparel fab-rics and fashion, with an event held
in spring and autumn of each year,has with growing success sincebeing acquired by Messe Frankfurt in2002 become the meeting place forthe international clothing industry.
Via its international network of sub-sidiaries, Messe Frankfurt offerstrade fairs for apparel fabrics aroundthe world under the Interstoff brandname. It positioned itself early on inmarkets where the production sites fortextiles and clothing are traditionallylocated – in Asia, and Hong Kong inparticular. This is where Messe Frank-furt began its overseas involvementback in 1987. The location was a goodchoice, attracting European andAmerican clothing companies. After18 years, Interstoff Asia has devel-oped into a showcase for new fabricsfrom 400 mostly Asian producers. Thedismantling from 1 January 2005 ofthe textiles export quotas, which since1974 were regulated around the globeby the Multi-fibre Arrangement, willfurther reinforce Hong Kong’s posi-tion. Parallel to Interstoff Asia Spring2004, the new Source It celebrated its première. The trade fair for pro-ducers of textiles and apparel, fibresand yarns as well as special machinesmakes Interstoff Asia the one-stopsource for textiles products and services.
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Textiles fairs – fabrics for high-tech, the home and fashion
■ New textiles fairs in Russia
In an exclusive framework, MesseFrankfurt presented a successful debutin Moscow from 22 to 25 September2004 in the halls of the new Crocus Expoexhibition centre in the north-west ofMoscow: for the first time, it was ex-clusive organiser of Heimtextil Rossija,Ambiente Rossija and ChristmasworldRossija. The new collective trade fairsincluding the Heimtextil and Ambientetrade fairs, which have been establishedin Moscow since 1999, showed tradevisitors a full range of products formodern living and interior design. InMoscow in particular, there is a grow-ing demand for high-quality consumergoods.
As the first international trade fair forapparel fabrics in Moscow, InterstoffRossija from 7 to 9 September 2005will augment the Interstoff brand. Thedemand for apparel fabrics in Russia isgreater than domestic supply. Hence,the Russian market offers foreign man-ufacturers enormous export opportuni-ties.
growth markets and, like this, accessto the world markets at compara-tively low cost. They help interna-tional market leaders to consolidatetheir position, with the major carmanufacturers using Automechankain a targeted way to present theirservices in growth markets. The fiveoverseas Automechanika showsdrew around 1,760 exhibitors and141,000 visitors in 2004.
At three trade fair venues in Asia
In Asia, Automechanika is present atthree important trade fair venues inChina and Malaysia: in Beijing, inShanghai and in Kuala Lumpur. Auto-mechanika Shanghai, which debutedin 2004 alongside AutomechanikaBeijing, proved to be a worthwhileinvestment. The financial and com-mercial metropolis Shanghai is at thesame time the most important locationfor car production and the subcom-ponents industry in China. With this,
depending on their regional focuses,car manufacturers and parts suppliersnow have the option of choosing Automechanika China in the Northin uneven years and AutomechanikaShanghai in the South in even-num-bered years.
Cars for the Russian market
At Auto + Automechanika St. Peters-burg, the major car manufacturerspresent their latest models to theRussian market – in 2004, Volkswagenintroduced the New Beetle Convert-ible. The trade fair also shows theclassic Automechanika portfolio –parts, accessories as well as work-shop and service station equipment.With the growing number of cars inRussia, demand for high-quality replacement parts and repair shopequipment remains high. Againstthis background, the AutomechanikaAcademy attracted considerable interest, which discussed “Issues
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fair is the global leader in its branch,and Messe Frankfurt, together withinternational partners, intends tomake use of the potential it still har-bours to continue to expand its posi-tion worldwide.
Successful around the globe
Combining Automechanika with thecongresses held by the AutomechanikaAcademy on themes of current inter-est to the branch has proved to be asuccessful programme. In Frankfurt,the Original Equipment Forum and theAftermarket Forum flanked the tradeshow and informed visitors abouttrends and innovations in the auto-motive sector, new technologies andgrowth markets. Themes includedthe new group exemption regulations,the relationship between car manu-facturers and dealers as well as theimpact of the EU enlargement.
Automechanika is among thoseMesse Frankfurt brands that enjoythe greatest international coverage.Eight fairs in Russia, Turkey, China,Malaysia, Argentina, Mexico and the United Arab Emirates offer ex-hibitors trade fairs tailored to thespecific needs of the respective markets and high quality standards.These offer small and medium-sizedfirms opportunities to penetrate new
Technical fairs with fascination potential
26
The five brands represented by the
Frankfurt technical fairs are global
flagship fairs. The key areas of con-
centration are the architecture sec-
tor with the ISH and Light + Building
and the automotive sector with
Automechanika. Every three years,
the IFFA draws representatives from
the meat-processing industry to
Frankfurt, and every four years
Texcare brings together the world
market for modern textiles care in the
Main region.
Automechanika achieved an out-standing result in Frankfurt am Mainin 2004: more than 163,000 visitors – a rise of two per cent – and around4,500 exhibitors, that is three per centmore than at the previous event in2002. Messe Frankfurt’s dual strategy,on the one hand to strengthen Auto-mechanika on the home front and onthe other to continue to internation-alise, has paid off. The signature ofthis event is its strength as the inter-national blue-chip car componentsand accessories trade fair and at thesame time the leading fair for bodyshop and car repair shop owners inGermany.
Automechanika in some cases chalkedup significant increases in the num-ber of exhibitors and visitors fromEurope, the USA and Asia. This trade
■ Automechanika Gulf on the road to
success
In a particularly exclusive market envi-ronment, Automechanika Gulf in theUnited Arab Emirates established itselfwith its second event as the leading af-termarket fair in the Middle East. Thenumber of exhibitors was more thandoubled to 289. Some 5,500 trade visi-tors travelled to the trade fair metropolisDubai, six per cent more than to thepremière last year.
■ In the lead in Central and South America
PAACE Automechanika Mexico andAutomechanika Argentina are themost important trade platforms for theinternational automotive industry inCentral and South America. At PAACEAutomechanika Mexico in 2004, visitornumbers were up by around 30 percent. The cooperation with major tradeassociations and partners is instrumen-tal in the success of this trade show.Over the course of the past few years,Messe Frankfurt has consistently intensified its involvement in Centraland South America.
Even and especially during the eco-nomically tense situation in Argentina,it maintained a presence in this keymarket. This perseverance is now reap-ing the reward: compared to the pre-vious event in 2002, AutomechanikaArgentina expanded on all fronts:■ 32,000 visitors (up 50 per cent)■ 411 exhibitors (up 47 per cent)■ 12,800 net leased area
(up 100 per cent)
relating to the development of theRussian automotive industry” as itsmain theme.
New developments in architecture
and technology
The architecture and technology sec-tor has earned a high-profile positionin Frankfurt through the internationalblue-chip fairs Light + Building andISH. In an annually alternating rhythm,these two trade fairs present the state-of-the-art in building technology. Inuneven years, the ISH shows build-ing and energy technology, the bath-room experience and air conditioningand ventilation technology. In even-numbered years, Light + Buildingturns Frankfurt into the hub of theindustry for lighting, electrical engi-neering, house and building automa-tion and architecture-relevant systems.
In 2004, Light + Building welcomedsix per cent more visitors than at theprevious event. In total, the thirdLight + Building opened its doors to116,000 trade visitors, 28 per cent ofthese coming from abroad. Visitorsatisfaction with the fair rose to 96per cent. With its combination oflighting, electrical engineering andhouse and building automation, thetrade show is the leading innovationforum worldwide for building-tech-nology solutions with sophisticateddesign.
Light + Building can justifiably bedescribed as the “global lightingfair” as it covers virtually the entirelighting spectrum. It is the only tradeshow in the world that structuresand clearly presents the internationaloffering of light fittings and lamps.
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Light + Building is the most importantinformation platform for the Germantrade sector and also actively address-es architects and planners. Withinthe scope of the new “Architecture-relevant Systems” concept, Light +Building 2004 placed greater emphasison elevators, sun-protection systems,façade technology and daylight sys-tems. This makes the trade fair in-creasingly interesting for architectsand planners – some 20,000 attendedLight + Building in 2004.
Biggest lighting fair in Asia
The two strong brands Light +Building and ISH take the architec-ture and technology trade fair conceptto strategically important markets. Thelighting and electrical engineeringindustries can in the meantime choosefrom successful Messe Frankfurtoverseas fairs in three countries fortheir presentations: in the UnitedArab Emirates Lightstyle Gulf Light
in Dubai, in Argentina BIEL Light +Building in Buenos Aires and in Asiathe Guangzhou International Light-ing Exhibition + Electrical BuildingTechnology China in Guangzhou – thecontinent’s biggest lighting fair. In2004, it presented the biggest choiceof Chinese lighting products world-wide on 55,000 square metres of ex-hibition space. This year, the show wasfor the first time organised jointlyby Guangya Exhibition & Trade Co.
■ Luminale takes light to Frankfurt
Luminale takes the light of Light + Building into the city of Frankfurt and the Rhine-Main region. With 92 light creations and some 120 guided tours, lectures, receptionsand parties parallel to Light + Building, the light-culture spectacle turned Frankfurtafter nightfall into a metropolis of light art. Promenaders on an evening tour throughthe city experienced the façade of the famous Frankfurt Römer bathed in deep red orthe normally white front of the Kaufhof department store on the Hauptwache illumi-nated by projections showing the store’s interior. A riverboat line on the River Mainalong the industrial culture route to Rüsselsheim created a link to the light installa-tions taking place there. International artists and light designers took advantage of Luminale as a light laboratory for testing the design possibilities of experimentingwith light and created unique art projects in public places.
exhibitors was above all accounted forby the fact that Texcare is deemed adecision-makers’ trade fair – morethan 77 per cent of the trade visitorsare owners of businesses or membersof the top management.
Texcare Asia will be held in 2005 forthe first time on the Chinese mainland,having previously been organised inSingapore and Hong Kong. The num-ber of commercial laundries and dry-cleaners in China is continually on therise and with it also the demand forhigh-quality equipment.
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visitors, seven per cent more than theprevious event. Manufacturers developtheir new products specifically to coincide with the date of the fair. Thetrade visitors are aware of this andwait with their investment decisionsuntil they have visited the world’sleading trade fair for machines andequipment covering the entire processchain from slaughtering, jointing,processing, through to packaging andselling the products.
In Argentina, Messe Frankfurt is util-ising its experience in the meat in-dustry gained through the IFFA inorder to further expand the TecnoFidta fair. This trade fair for food tech-nology, additives and ingredientswith more than 13,300 trade visitorstoday already belongs to the keytrade shows for the foodstuffs mar-ket in South America.
Nearly every second trade visitor toTexcare International 2004 in Frankfurtam Main came from outside Germany.Like this, the already high share ofinternational visitors to this fair in-creased once more and is now at 45per cent. All visitors issued the tradefair and the products on show topmarks and almost unanimously judgedTexcare International to be a com-plete success. The high degree ofsatisfaction of the more than 250
complete cross-section of all branchsegments and the high quality of thevisitors received a particularly posi-tive reaction.
Platform for China’s building boom
For Chinese planners, architects, fit-ters, engineers and building contrac-tors scouting for the latest productsin the field of sanitaryware, heatingand air conditioning technology, theISH China has in the meantime be-come an important sourcing platform.The products on display in 2004demonstrated the entire bandwidthof heating, water systems technologyand air conditioning equipment –technologies that are gaining in im-portance given China’s boomingconstruction industry. The potentialof this trade fair is not yet exhausted,so that further growth can be ex-pected.
Texcare and IFFA fire up visitors
Every three years, the IFFA/IFFA Delicat– international trade fair for the meat-processing industry – and every fouryears Texcare International – worldmarket for modern textiles care –augment the spectrum of technical fairsin Frankfurt. In 2004, the IFFA showedthe latest developments in the industryand reached more than 56,000 trade
and Messe Frankfurt. In line with theportfolio of Light + Building inFrankfurt, the building technologysegment was successfully incorpo-rated and thus the concept of theFrankfurt flagship fair adopted.
Modern technology for the USA
With three sanitaryware and heatingindustry trade fairs, the ISH offerspresentation platforms overseas: theISH Kitchen + Bathroom Gulf inDubai, ISH China in Beijing and ISHNorth America in Boston. In theUnited States, the ISH North Americaboosted visitor numbers by 14 percent to around 13,500 with its thirdevent. The special exhibitions featur-ing innovative heating and buildingtechnology from Europe generatedconsiderable interest. The trade fair’s
■ Lifetime with a new concept
Dual concept for Lifetime: from 2005, it willmake the spa and wellness segment thesubject of a congress within the scope ofthe ISH – the international trade fair forbuilding and energy technology, the bath-room experience and air conditioning andventilation technology. In even-numberedyears it will be organised as a separateinternational trade fair for spa and wellness.
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its niche as a small specialised eventand for the first time provided theextrusion industry with a presentationplatform.
Following an extremely positive startin 2003, IMEX sustained its growth in2004 against the general economictrend. The top event of the sector forcongresses, events and the incentivetravel market managed to raise thenumber of exhibitors by 15 per centto 2,500, the number of visitors byeleven per cent to 6,200 and alsogrew in area by 68 per cent to 17,800square metres. In 2005, the consistentgrowth continued following the movefrom Hall 3 into Hall 8, where IMEXnow has optimum conditions for itsfurther expansion on one hall level.
New forms of cooperation
Messe Frankfurt sees itself as a part-ner to its guest organisers and thecommon goal is to stage a successfulevent. Personal support and long-term business relations therefore formthe basis for the cooperation. Theemployees of Messe Frankfurt placetheir experience gained through theorganisation of Messe Frankfurt’s ownevents at the disposal of the guestorganisers for the planning of theirevents. Together with the extensiverange of services offered by Messe
Frankfurt and the multi-functional,centrally located exhibition site, thestage is thus set for events of everymagnitude.
New forms of cooperation were entered into in 2004 with the ACS, aguest show which for the first timewas held in tandem with one ofMesse Frankfurt’s own shows, Light+ Building. With its central theme,the trade fair for computer systemsin the building sector was able to ex-ploit valuable synergies with the inter-national flagship fair for architectureand technology. The new guest fairsintroduced at the Frankfurt venue in2004, export21, a trade fair for ex-port-oriented companies, and the ITSavings Bank Forum, successfully established themselves.
32
Guest events have always ranked
high at the Frankfurt trade fair
venue. World-renowned fairs such
as the Frankfurt Book Fair and the
biennial IAA International Motor
Show have their fixed place in
Frankfurt alongside ACHEMA and
EuroMold.
The guest fairs significantly influencethe trade fair calendar in Frankfurtam Main. Each year, the FrankfurtBook Fair invites the literary worldto Frankfurt and every two years theIAA Cars turns Frankfurt into an auto-motive metropolis. If these are joinedby ACHEMA, the world’s largest tradefair for chemical engineering, the result is peak values as in 2003 with1.9 million visitors. Messe Frankfurtintends to step up its acquisition ofhigh-quality guest events in thecoming years so as to better utilisethe capacities of the exhibitiongrounds.
In 2004, the 20 guest trade fairs inFrankfurt welcomed around 530,000visitors and 13,300 exhibitors.ACHEMA and the IAA were missingby rotation from the trade fair calen-dar, with the result that correspond-ingly fewer visitors to the Frankfurtexhibition grounds were counted.Special exhibitions from the fields ofarchitecture, banking, mechanical
engineering, IT software, fashion,tourism and design occupied around417,000 square metres of exhibitionspace.
A variety of themes and continuous
growth
The Frankfurt Book Fair drew interna-tional attention with its guest of honour “Arabian World”. Readings,discussion rounds and accompany-ing events carried the fair beyond theexhibition grounds into the city andits environs. The Frankfurt Book Fairhad positioned itself more stronglyas a trade fair in 2004, which didnothing, however, to detract from itspopularity with the general public.
For the past eleven years, DematGmbH has achieved continuousgrowth with its EuroMold show heldat the Frankfurt am Main venue. Theglobal showcase for tool and mouldmaking, design and product develop-ment has been complemented since2002 by the parallel Turntec event,which is successful on the market asan international trade fair for turningcomponents, turning and millingtechnology. As its third event at theFrankfurt venue, Demat GmbH suc-cessfully launched Extruma in Febru-ary 2005. The international trade fairfor extrusion technology has found
More guest fairs come to Frankfurt
The number of congresses and con-
ferences held at the Messe Frankfurt
Congress Center in 2004 grew by
more than a quarter. The events were
attended by around 29,000 more
participants than in the previous year.
The share of international events
reached more than 20 per cent.
With 136 events and 108,000 partici-pants, 2004 recorded the most con-gress events ever since the MesseFrankfurt Congress Center wasopened. That is an increase of 28events over the prior year’s result.The number of participants rose accordingly by more than 28,700,which is a growth of 36 per cent.Around a third of the events wereheld over several days and the inter-national scope grew with 28 Englishor multi-language events to 20 percent.
The main focuses were congressesand exhibitions from the fields ofmedicine and science, banking andfinance and the IT sector. One of thebest-attended highlights was theDeutsche Sparkassentag (GermanSavings Bank Meeting) with 3,500participants, which gathered togetherrepresentatives of all Germany’ssavings banks in Frankfurt; as wellas Interpharm including an exhibition
with 4,200 participants and theDeutsche Schmerztag (German In-terdisciplinary Pain Congress) witharound 2,000 participants.
Flexibly combining Congress Center,Festhalle and Forum with the adja-cent Halls 1, 3 and 5 offers signifi-cant advantages for customers andwith the excellent internationaltransport connections makes MesseFrankfurt a top congress destination.
Messe Frankfurt augments
congress business
■ Messe Frankfurt organises World
Climate Summit
For the very first time in 2004, MesseFrankfurt organised a large-scale con-gress on international level. The sub-sidiary Indexport Messe Frankfurt S.A.was commissioned by the Argentinegovernment to organise the tenthWorld Climate Conference in BuenosAires. The 5,000 participants includedthe delegates from the 189 signatorystates of the UN Framework Conven-tion on Climate Change.
Indexport Messe Frankfurt S.A. organ-ised all the necessary facilities, coordi-nated the service providers and wasresponsible for providing the entiretechnical infrastructure.
34 35
2Shaping
➔
Top crowd-pulling concert events and
more corporate functions caused
visitor numbers at the Festhalle to
climb in 2004. With the Festhalle as
a focal point, the Frankfurt exhibi-
tion grounds offer the best possible
prerequisites for concerts, sporting
events and company events.
Compared to 2002, which by virtue ofthe rotation of events is the appro-priate benchmark year, the numberof events rose by eleven to 58 andthe number of visitors by 50 per centto 419,000. Famous touring acts suchas Holiday on Ice and stars like Sting,Sarah Brightman and Phil Collins drewthousands of fans to the Festhalle.One highlight among the sportingevents in 2004 was again the Frank-furt city marathon with its unique
finish leading straight into the Fest-halle. Messe Frankfurt is underscoringits commitment to this high-calibresporting event as the title sponsorfor a further three years and with thenew word brand “Messe FrankfurtMarathon”.
Renowned corporations such asFiat, Deutsche VermögensberatungAktiengesellschaft (DVAG), IVECO,AXA-Versicherungen and Fraportchose the Frankfurt exhibition com-plex as the venue for a variety ofcorporate events. Rewe held its“Happy Family” corporate presenta-tion and tour operator Thomas Cookwas a guest at the exhibition groundsfor the eleventh year with its “Pre-miere Reisesommer”. Since 2002,corporate event business has almostdoubled and it is planned to furtherexpand this segment in the years tocome.
With Festhalle, Forum and CongressCenter, which can either be used individually or be combined as re-quired with the nearby Halls 1, 3, 4,5 and 6 as well as with the open-airspaces, Messe Frankfurt offers idealpremises for events, product pre-sentations, roadshows or kick-offevents of all dimensions.
More company events in the Festhalle
37
2➔
Shaping
*) visitors of Art Frankfurt including vernissage and other free entries
**) Beautyworld, Lifetime, Cosmetica and Passione were parallel events. For total visitors see Beauty Week
***) The visitor numbers for the Public Design trade exhibition are included in those for Light + Building
****) entry free of charge for visitors to and participants in the Frankfurt Marathon
Event Exhibitors Net area Visitors
Number Germany Other Total incl. special Germany Other Totalof events countries show space countries
■ ACS 167 7 174 3,785 5,000 5,000
■ export21 62 16 78 1,215 1,056 52 1,108
■ ITeG 144 3 147 3,116 2,283 71 2,354
■ IT-Sparkassenforum 78 78 4,000 4,400 4,400
■ LinuxWorld Conference & Expo 132 17 149 2,673 13,858 729 14,587
■ Public Design ***) 32 7 39 858
■ Other trade exhibitions 3 444 444 13,224 14,800 14,800
■ Trade exhibitions 9 1,059 50 1,109 28,871 41,397 852 42,249
■ Marathon Mall ****) 77 3 80 2,001 35,000 35,000
■ Sales marts and exhibitions 6 485 485 38,999 120,950 120,950
■ Exhibitions open to the public 7 562 3 565 41,000 155,950 155,950
Trade fairs and exhibitions at the Frankfurt exhibition venue 2004
■ International trade fairs 25 13,438 24,526 37,964 1,278,322 896,226 410,484 1,306,710
■ Trade exhibitions 9 1,059 50 1,109 28,871 41,397 852 42,249
■ Exhibitions open to the public 7 562 3 565 41,000 155,950 155,950
41 15,059 24,579 39,638 1,348,193 1,093,573 411,336 1,504,909
36
Trade fairs and exhibitions at the Frankfurt exhibition venue in 2004
■ International trade fairs
■ Trade exhibitions
■ Exhibitions open to the public
Overall activities of Messe Frankfurt in 2004
Event Exhibitors Net area Visitors
Number Germany Other Total incl. special Germany Other Totalof events countries show space countries
■ Ambiente 1,500 3,132 4,632 193,410 91,109 52,412 143,521
■ Art Frankfurt *) 119 36 155 7,597 28,100 28,100
■ Automechanika 999 3,465 4,464 163,870 101,922 61,415 163,337
■ Beauty Week **) 20,018 3,347 23,365
■ Beautyworld **) 203 361 564 16,109
■ Book Fair 2,809 3,882 6,691 91,195 216,491 53,922 270,413
■ Christmasworld 304 703 1,007 49,552 16,204 13,872 30,076
■ Cosmetica **) 127 9 136 3,845
■ EuroMold 1,040 463 1,503 39,617 47,861 11,081 58,942
■ European Banking & Insurance Fair 212 57 269 5,906 6,693 435 7,128
■ FUR & FASHION FRANKFURT 81 53 134 5,218 4,391 3,585 7,976
■ Heimtextil 563 2,507 3,070 160,539 48,748 50,055 98,803
■ IFFA/IFFA Delicat 432 426 858 57,358 34,381 22,074 56,455
■ Imex 384 2,143 2,527 17,794 3,023 3,198 6,221
■ Lifetime **) 117 21 138 4,325
■ Light + Building ***) 819 1,101 1,920 112,985 84,064 31,997 116,061
■ Media-Tech Expo 36 139 175 5,909 1,281 2,634 3,915
■ Musikmesse 484 976 1,460 53,667 46,893 18,335 65,228
■ OPTATEC 260 174 434 7,083 4,144 1,302 5,446
■ Paperworld 615 1,899 2,514 93,849 32,628 36,268 68,896
■ Passione **) 102 59 161 2,846
■ Pro Sign 132 71 203 5,311 5,851 952 6,803
■ Prolight + Sound 232 398 630 24,696 17,708 9,027 26,735
■ Tendence Lifestyle 1,502 2,212 3,714 132,179 67,463 23,675 91,138
■ Texcare International - IWC 94 158 252 17,589 7,176 6,155 13,331
■ Turntec 272 81 353 5,873 10,077 4,743 14,820
■ International trade fairs 25 13,438 24,526 37,964 1,278,322 896,226 410,484 1,306,710
39
2➔
Shaping
Overseas events in 2004
*) For visitors see Heimtextil Japan
**) For visitors see Heimtextil Rossija
Consumer goods fairs Exhibitors Net area Visitors
Event Number Host Other Total incl. special Host Other Totalof events country countries show area country countries
Ambiente
Ambiente Buenos Aires Spring 162 18 180 4,301 11,014 144 11,158
Ambiente Buenos Aires Autumn 134 2 136 4,002 13,887 138 14,025
Ambiente Japan *) 52 245 297 4,195
Ambiente Rossija **) 29 84 113 2,157
4 377 349 726 14,655 24,901 282 25,183
Paperworld
Hong Kong International Stationery Fair 86 135 221 2,304 6,039 6,282 12,321
1 86 135 221 2,304 6,039 6,282 12,321
Christmasworld
Christmasworld Rossija **) 8 7 15 429
1 8 7 15 429
Beautyworld
Beautyworld Japan 332 233 565 8,367 41,490 1,910 43,400
Beautyworld Middle East Gulf Beauty 43 350 393 4,745 4,136 3,000 7,136
Cosmesur Beautyworld Buenos Aires 142 142 4,454 31,842 303 32,145
3 517 583 1,100 17,566 77,468 5,213 82,681
Musikmesse
Music China 454 169 623 15,480 23,150 2,006 25,156
1 454 169 623 15,480 23,150 2,006 25,156
Other consumer goods fairs
H&H Housewares & Hometech Middle East 44 120 164 2,323 4,200 2,343 6,543
Passage Asia **) 109 109 1,185
Seoul International Consumer Goods Fair 126 51 177 2,295 3,876 499 4,375
Style Asia 29 191 220 2,583 7,841 118 7,959
Toy Fair Middle East 50 113 163 1,568 2,600 1,774 4,374
5 249 584 833 9,954 18,517 4,734 23,251
Total consumer goods fairs 15 1,691 1,827 3,518 60,388 150,075 18,517 168,592
38
Overall activities of Messe Frankfurt in 2004
Trade fairs and exhibitions in Germany outside the Frankfurt exhibition venue in 2004
Trade fairs and exhibitions in Germany in 2004
Event Exhibitors Net area Visitors
Number Germany Other Total incl. special Germany Other Totalof events countries show space countries
■ EMV 71 62 133 1,371 2,897 724 3,621
■ FACILITY MANAGEMENT 74 2 76 678 1,994 16 2,010
■ Gerontologica 13 13 64 328 328
■ handarbeit & hobby 88 92 180 7,318 6,049 1,758 7,807
■ Licensing Forum 23 2 25 659 491 221 712
■ Marketing Services 306 27 333 5,647 6,012 872 6,884
■ PCIM 83 67 150 4,010 3,786 1,473 5,259
■ SMT/HYBRID/PACKAGING 436 217 653 12,654 16,624 6,790 23,414
■ SPS/IPC/DRIVES 878 152 1,030 36,892 28,940 2,882 31,822
9 1,972 621 2,593 69,293 67,121 14,736 81,857
Event Exhibitors Net area Visitors
Number Germany Other Total incl. special Germany Other Totalof events countries show space countries
■ International trade fairs 31 15,300 25,143 40,443 1,346,214 960,534 424,983 1,385,517
■ Trade exhibitions 12 1,169 54 1,223 30,272 44,210 1,089 45,299
■ Exhibitions open to the public 7 562 3 565 41,000 155,950 155,950
50 17,031 25,200 42,231 1,417,486 1,160,694 426,072 1,586,766
■ International trade fairs
■ Trade exhibitions
■ Exhibitions open to the public
41
2➔
Shaping
Technical fairs Exhibitors Net area Visitors
Event Number Host Other Total incl. special Host Other Totalof events country countries show area country countries
IFFA
Tecno Fidta 256 9 265 6,457 12,768 588 13,356
1 256 9 265 6,457 12,768 588 13,356
Prolight + Sound
Prolight + Sound Shanghai 96 34 130 3,765 8,502 600 9,102
1 96 34 130 3,765 8,502 600 9,102
Architecture and technology
ISH
ISH China 171 76 247 5,900 13,121 987 14,108
ISH Kitchen + Bathroom Gulf 19 44 63 1,017 1,500 1,239 2,739
ISH North America 422 115 537 8,807 12,291 1,165 13,456
3 612 235 847 15,724 26,912 3,391 30,303
Light + Building
Guangzhou Int. Lighting Exhibition 745 172 917 23,400 31,768 3,727 35,495
Lightstyle Gulf Light 15 46 61 771 1,165 1,200 2,365
2 760 218 978 24,171 32,933 4,927 37,860
5 1,372 453 1,825 39,895 59,845 8,318 68,163
Automotive and technology
Automechanika
Auto + Automechanika St. Petersburg 282 82 364 7,716 74,788 3,568 78,356
Automechanika Argentina 364 47 411 12,784 29,665 2,756 32,421
Automechanika Gulf 41 248 289 4,814 3,400 2,092 5,492
Automechanika Shanghai 110 125 235 4,073 7,768 1,370 9,138
Expo Transporte 213 52 265 19,858 23,881 722 24,603
PAACE Automechanika Mexico 161 302 463 6,077 13,676 1,826 15,502
6 1,171 856 2,027 55,322 153,178 12,334 165,512
Total technical fairs 13 2,895 1,352 4,247 105,439 234,293 21,840 256,133
40
Overall activities of Messe Frankfurt in 2004
*) Visitors and special show space including Ambiente Japan and Home Design Japan
**) Visitors including Ambiente Rossija, Christmasworld Rossija and Passage Asia
***) For visitors see Heimtextil Japan
Textiles fairs Exhibitors Net area Visitors
Event Number Host Other Total incl. special Host Other Totalof events country countries show area country countries
Heimtextil
Heimtextil India 169 13 182 4,852 6,327 3,925 10,252
Heimtextil Japan *) 17 96 113 2,256 19,769 570 20,339
Heimtextil Rossija **) 27 132 159 3,258 11,622 678 12,300
Home Design Japan ***) 107 1 108 2,318
Intertextile Shanghai Home Textiles 308 73 381 23,093 16,554 2,850 19,404
5 628 315 943 35,777 54,272 8,023 62,295
Interstoff
Interstoff Asia Autumn 72 250 322 3,990 7,744 2,999 10,743
Interstoff Asia Spring ****) 50 356 406 4,727 6,998 3,205 10,203
Intertextile Beijing Apparel Fabrics 338 205 543 8,235 13,881 2,453 16,334
Intertextile Shanghai Apparel Fabrics and Accessories 662 547 1,209 21,229 32,513 10,391 42,904
Shenzhen Intertextile Pavilion 60 10 70 867 3,480 244 3,724
Texworld Spring 3 626 629 11,736 2,179 13,994 16,173
Texworld Autumn 3 648 651 12,404 2,740 14,565 17,305
Yarn Expo 87 41 128 1,320 7,217 308 7,525
8 1,275 2,683 3,958 64,508 76,752 48,159 124,911
Intima
Intima America Spring 49 29 78 970 1,822 276 2,098
Intima America Summer 49 29 78 970 1,822 276 2,098
Intima Japan 16 25 41 378 2,790 197 2,987
Intimate Apparel Salon (Autumn), NY +) 47 19 66 247 490 35 525
4 161 102 263 2,565 6,924 784 7,708
Techtextil
Cinte Techtextil China 151 149 300 3,571 5,357 1,158 6,515
Techtextil North America 155 133 288 4,562 3,019 844 3,863
2 306 282 588 8,133 8,376 2,002 10,378
Total textiles fairs 19 2,370 3,382 5,752 110,983 146,324 58,968 205,292
****) including Source It
+) including Intima America Autumn
43
2➔
Shaping
Event Exhibitors Net area Visitors
Number Germany Other Total incl. special Germany Other Totalof events countries show space countries
Congresses and conferences at the exhibition centre not linked to trade fairs 136 108,000 108,000
Congresses and events (supervised by “Conventure”)* 12 7,500 7,500
Events (concerts, sporting, religious, political and other events) 58 419,114 419,114
German pavilions(planning and implementation of show participations) 12
Akademie Messe Frankfurt 19 240 240
237 534,854 534,854
*) The total number of participants amounts to approx. 9,500, of whom approx. 2,000 were already included under own events.
Overall activities of Messe Frankfurt in 2004
Congresses, events and other activities in 2004
Event Exhibitors Net area Visitors
Number Germany/ Other Total incl. special Germany/ Other Totalof events Host countries show space Host countries
countries countries
Trade fairs and exhibitions at the Frankfurt exhibition venue 41 15,059 24,579 39,638 1,348,193 1,093,573 411,336 1,504,909
Trade fairs and exhibitions in Germany outside the Frankfurt exhibition venue 9 1,972 621 2,593 69,293 67,121 14,736 81,857
Overseas events 59 8,420 7,066 15,486 322,736 644,182 106,148 750,330
Congresses, events and other activities 237 534,854 534,854
346 25,451 32,266 57,717 1,740,222 2,339,730 532,220 2,871,950
42
Overall activities of Messe Frankfurt in 2004
Other trade fair themes overseas Exhibitors Net area Visitors
Event Number Host Other Total incl. special Host Other Totalof events country countries show area country countries
Garden, Landscaping & Outdoor Living 11 40 51 685 1,000 1,054 2,054
Hardware & Tools Middle East 30 114 144 1,870 3,000 2,290 5,290
Micromachine 195 10 205 1,127 8,132 81 8,213
ABF Franchising Show 154 9 163 5,349 10,856 33 10,889
Canadian Waste Recycling/Public Works Expo 173 50 223 4,546 2,695 235 2,930
COMDEX 315 74 389 12,428 45,593 256 45,849
EMT 138 23 161 4,562 4,200 80 4,280
Expo Forestal 173 13 186 6,858 14,895 105 15,000
Fehab 92 3 95 3,967 13,704 18 13,722
Intersec 44 160 204 3,179 2,626 2,500 5,126
Open Network Automation System Expo 65 1 66 182 2,387 7 2,394
Seguriexpo Buenos Aires 74 8 82 1,173 4,402 164 4,566
Total other trade fair themes overseas 12 1,464 505 1,969 45,926 113,490 6,823 120,313
Overall activities of Messe Frankfurt abroad 59 8,420 7,066 15,486 322,736 644,182 106,148 750,330
Every trade fair is a new beginning. Its
success depends on many people working
hand in hand to ensure the best possible
outcome. It unites a high level of qualifica-
tion, expertise and lifelong learning. Messe
Frankfurt as a workplace offers a broad
spectrum of development possibilities. And
this is something not only the company’s
employees appreciate, but also thousands
of service providers, craftsmen and sub-
contractors who obtain contracts through
our trade fairs. We act and create values for
many.
45
3
44
Acting
The high qualification level and expertise of
the 1,227 employees worldwide are a key
success factor for Messe Frankfurt. The
continuous investment in training is a gain
for the entire group. This enables the com-
pany to acquire additional know-how, at
the same time increase the commitment
of its staff and create a long-term competi-
tive edge as an attractive employer.
Success and growth of Messe
Frankfurt are closely tied in with the
expertise and motivation of the
group’s employees. Messe Frankfurt
is an attractive place of work – and
not only at the home venue in
Frankfurt am Main. Through its
various training programmes, the
company offers young people
promising prospects for the future.
After six years of intensive growth inwhich the number of employeesworldwide has nearly doubled, thecompany embarked on a consolida-tion course in Germany in 2004, com-bined with moderate growth in ex-panding markets. At the end-of-perioddate 31.12.2004, a total of 1,277people worked for Messe Frankfurt,272 of these outside Germany. Thatis 14 more than in the previous year.Additional jobs were created in 2004above all through the expansion ofoverseas operations in Argentina,China and the United Arab Emirates.
Attracting qualified junior staff
Messe Frankfurt accepts its socialresponsibility to offer young peoplepromising career prospects. As alogical consequence of this, thenumber of trainees in Germany wasagain raised from 19 to 22. New in2004 is the possibility to qualify as aPR officer through a two-year volun-tary training course. Messe Frankfurt
offers traineeships leading to thequalification of office clerk, eventmanager, specialist information scientist, energy electronics engineerfor administration and maintenance,as well as graduate in businessadministration (BA) at RavensburgUniversity of Cooperative Education.
Messe Frankfurt has maintained aclose cooperation with RavensburgUniversity of Cooperative Educationfor eight years. This three-year prac-tice-oriented course of studies witha focus on “trade fair and congressmanagement” provides the companywith the opportunity to win andcommit qualified junior executives tothe company.
Integrating and expanding expertise
In order to more intensively exploit,integrate and expand the existingexpertise of its staff, Messe Frankfurtoffered theme-oriented workshopsfor employees and a managementdevelopment centre in 2004 asfocuses within the scope of its humanresources development programme.These instruments on the one handhelp to promote the internal dia-logue between executive staff andemployees, and on the other handcontribute to the qualified furthertraining of executive staff, enablingthem to identify and develop exist-ing potentials.
Growth through motivation and commitment
Success factor human resources policy
46 47
3➔
Flexible working hours and
health management
The flexible system of workinghours, which does away with fixedcore times, guarantees optimal pre-conditions for customer and serviceorientation, which are indispensableespecially in a globally operatingcompany. At the same time, giventhe 62 per cent share of women anda quota of part-time staff of twelveper cent, this contributes consider-ably to enabling employees to jug-gle the commitments of family andwork. Teleworking was introducedfor the first time in 2004.
A healthy and varied diet is one of themost important prerequisites for ahealthy lifestyle. In its “Intermezzo”staff canteen, Messe Frankfurt offersits staff a daily breakfast and snacksand a subsidised lunch with a dailychoice of three menus and a gener-ous salad bar. Since February 2005,a second restaurant, “Cucina”, isavailable to staff as an alternative inthe new Dependence offices andservices building. The team from theAccente Gastronomie Services GmbHcatering subsidiary provides a pro-fessional service and high-qualitycatering in both restaurants.
Apart from a balanced diet, regularexercise is also an important factor instaying healthy. That is why MesseFrankfurt’s health managementscheme promotes the sporting activ-ities of its employees. More than 200employees currently take advantageof the sports opportunities offeredby the nine company sports groups– Chase Corporate Challenge, MesseFrankfurt Marathon, football, golf,skittles, diving, triathlon, volleyballand outdoor sports. The weekly consulting hour with the companyphysician, regular vaccination pro-grammes, information events relat-ing to addiction prevention andintensive first aid training are addi-tional elements of the company’shealthcare activities.
Continuous investment in MesseFrankfurt’s employees is vital to thesuccess of the entire group. Thisenables the company to acquireadditional know-how, at the sametime increase the commitment of its staff and create a long-term competitive edge as an attractiveemployer.
49
3Acting
➔
This creates an additional qualifica-tion possibility for all employees ofMesse Frankfurt parallel to the career-related further training measures.The internal further training scheme“Fit for Fair”, offers courses in foreignlanguages, information technologyand covers all aspects of “customerrelations“. In order to support andupdate specialised knowledge, theprogramme is rounded off by market-ing, project management and busi-ness administration seminars. Fur-thermore, Messe Frankfurt supportspart-time sandwich courses such asadditional training courses leading toChamber of Industry and Commercequalifications (IHK) or study coursesat the Management Academy (VWA).
The further training scheme foremployees of Messe Frankfurt waspursued in 2004 with a budget ofaround one million euros. With acommitted, motivated, flexible andqualified crew, the company is onthe right path to achieving its growthtargets in the future.
Attractive benefits package
The extensive range of company andsocial security benefits MesseFrankfurt provides for its employeesremained unchanged in 2004 – despitethe general trend:
■ Within the framework of the collec-tive wage agreement, the employ-ees receive a Christmas and holidaybonus.
■ In addition, Messe Frankfurt offersits employees a profit-participationbonus – in 2004 this amounted to86 per cent of the monthly salary.
■ Messe Frankfurt provides for itsemployee company pension schemeby making a mainly employer-financed contribution to the sup-plementary pension fund of the cityof Frankfurt.
■ In addition, the company offersdeferred compensation schemes asa means of supplementing privateprovisions for old age.
■ The company grants subsidies forpublic transport travel to work andcontributions to capital-buildingsaving schemes (VL).
■ The possibility of an interest-freeloan as well as allowances towardscosts for certain medical treatmentsand personal needs complete thebenefits package.
48
Success factor human resources policy
4
50 51
Messe Frankfurt has nearly tripled its over-
seas sales during the past five years to
around e 74 million. This development
reflects the success of the company’s
strategic orientation: growth outside
Germany in order to strengthen the group
and the Frankfurt exhibition venue. Over
the next ten years, we are planning to
invest large sums in innovative events and
the modernisation of our exhibition grounds.
Like this, we will continue to grow in terms
of quality – enabling us to defend and
continually expand our company’s leading
position.
4➔
53
Management Reportand Financial State-ments
52
Profitable growth is one of Messe Frankfurt’s
priority goals. Sales rose in 2004 to c 364.5
million, overseas sales grew by 31 per cent
to around c 74 million. For the future, Messe
Frankfurt is continuing to concentrate on
growth overseas, especially in Asia. This also
produces benefits for the trade fairs held at
the home venue in Frankfurt. As a result,
Frankfurt today has the highest level of inter-
nationalism in terms of both exhibitors and
visitors.
General economic conditions
According to the German ifo business report, in the 2004 business year theglobal economy showed its strongest growth since 1976. The real gross domestic product grew – after 3.9 per cent in 2003 – by around five per cent.The main engines of growth were China (GDP +9.5 per cent), Russia (+6.8 percent) and the threshold countries of eastern Asia (+5.4 per cent), as well astheir upwardly spiralling trade with each other. However, the global economicdynamism waned in the course of the year. The reason for this was primarilythe rise in oil prices which lasted into the autumn. In Japan and the westernEuropean economies, the devaluation of the US dollar had an additionaldampening effect on exports. The strong upward trend in the American econ-omy lost momentum as the year progressed; nevertheless growth lay at 4.4 per cent on the annual average. In the EU nations, economic growth wasat only 2.3 per cent despite the initial export-driven dynamism, however inthe euro zone – above all as a consequence of the upward revaluation of theeuro and the rise in the price of crude oil – it was only 1.8 per cent. In the new acceding countries, the gross domestic product grew by 4.7 per cent.
Although in Germany export business experienced a veritable boom and increased by 8.2 per cent, the German economy contributed only little to theglobal economic upswing with only 1.7 per cent growth. The economic revival of the first two quarterly periods in 2004 did not persist in the secondhalf of the year. This was on the one hand due to the fact that German imports also rose by nearly six per cent and on the other to the fact that im-pulses for growth from private investments and private consumption werelacking. Following a stagnation in 2003, private consumption fell in the yearunder review by 0.3 per cent.
The world trade indicator, which is of particular importance for the trade fairsector, increased in the reporting year by nine per cent, representing the thirdhighest rise within the past ten years. The highest real growth rate of all theregions in the world was posted by Asia with 14.5 per cent. In the positiontable of exporting nations, China for the first time occupied third place afterGermany and the USA, coming before Japan.
Group Management Report
Messe Frankfurt GmbH 2004
I. Business trend
54 55
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Management Report and Financial Statements
Situation in the trade fair sector
A still sluggish economy and structural problems also left a visible mark onthe trade fair sector in Germany. Drops in demand, mergers and not least in-solvencies in the mid-market corporate sector reduce the potential especiallyon the exhibitor side. The decline in the number of German exhibitors as wellas in the amount of leased space continued in 2004, but appears in the mean-time to be levelling off. According to the Ausstellungs- und Messe-Ausschussder Deutschen Wirtschaft (AUMA) e.V., Berlin (German Exhibition and TradeFair Committee), the number of exhibiting companies participating at the 154supra-regional trade fairs in Germany declined in 2004 by one per cent com-pared to the previous events to 167,000. It was not possible to fully compen-sate the 4.7 per cent drop in the number of German exhibitors to 79,000 by the 2.3 per cent increase in the number of foreign companies to 88,000.Visitor numbers fell by 1.5 per cent to just under 9.7 million; the leased areadeclined compared to the previous events by three per cent to 6.6 millionsquare metres.
Both in Germany and the rest of Europe, these downturns have to be seenalongside growing overcapacities in terms of hall space, leading to a scissor-like negative development: the leased area is on the decline – in the last fouryears alone by eight per cent in Germany – but hall capacities have increasedby eight per cent over the same period. New exhibition grounds currentlybeing built above all in Germany, Italy and Spain are exacerbating this trend,since on the European and on the German market in particular they are creat-ing massive overcapacities for which there is likely to be no demand in theforeseeable future.
The increasingly difficult situation on the European trade fair market is reflected in tougher competition and is adversely affecting the developmentof the exhibition corporations.
Messe Frankfurt corporate group
■ Germany
■ Europe
■ America
100 % Messe Frankfurt Italia Srl., Milan
100 % Messe Frankfurt France S.A.S., Paris
100 % O.O.O. Messe Frankfurt RUS Ltd., Moscow
100 % Messe Frankfurt Istanbul L.S., Istanbul
100 % Messe Frankfurt Ausstellungen GmbH, Wiesbaden
Messe Frankfurt GmbH
Asia ■
100 % Messe Frankfurt Inc., Atlanta
100 % Messe Frankfurt Mexico, S.de R. L. de C.V., Mexico City
60 % Mesago Messe Frankfurt GmbH (sub-group), Stuttgart
100 % EPOC Messe Frankfurt GmbH, Frankfurt
100 % Messe Frankfurt Exhibition GmbH, Frankfurt
100 % Messe Frankfurt Feiras Ltda., São Paulo
60 % Indexport Messe Frankfurt S.A., Buenos Aires
80 % Mesago Messe Frankfurt Corp., Tokyo
80 % Messe Frankfurt Korea Ltd., Seoul
95 % Accente Gastronomie Service GmbH, Frankfurt
100 % Messe Frankfurt Grundbesitz Verwaltung GmbH, Frankfurt
100 % Messe Frankfurt Medien und Service GmbH, Frankfurt
100 % Messe Frankfurt Venue GmbH & Co. KG, Frankfurt
100 % Messe Frankfurt Grundbesitz GmbH & Co. KG, Frankfurt
100 % Messe Frankfurt (H.K.) Ltd., Hong Kong
100 % Messe Frankfurt (Shanghai) Co. Ltd., Shanghai
100 % Messe Frankfurt Asia Holding Ltd., Hong Kong
100 % Messe Frankfurt Trade Fairs India Pvt. Ltd., Mumbai
Group Management Report Messe Frankfurt GmbH 2004
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Management Report and Financial Statements Group Management Report Messe Frankfurt GmbH 2004
Objectives and strategies of the Messe Frankfurt consolidated group
Profitable growth is one of Messe Frankfurt’s priority goals. For only as aneconomically sound company can it act as a good and reliable partner to itscustomers, its shareholders and its employees. First and foremost, the plannedinvestments of Messe Frankfurt Venue GmbH & Co. KG for the modernisationof the Frankfurt exhibition centre generate a financing requirement. MesseFrankfurt has identified four roads with which it hopes to achieve this growthin the coming years:
■ Broadening international scope – A path Messe Frankfurt identified in the
mid eighties and has since pursued with success. It will continue to focus on
growth overseas, especially in Asia. However, Messe Frankfurt’s worldwide
marketing organisation also promotes the trade fairs in Germany. One conse-
quence of this is that Messe Frankfurt has the highest level of international
participation both in terms of exhibitors and visitors, which compensates the
slight decline in the number of participants from Germany.
■ Alliances – Growth cannot and must not always come by one’s own efforts
alone. With its new more flexible organisational structure, Messe Frankfurt has
extended its scope for possible cooperations and alliances at home and abroad.
■ Innovations – New trade fairs are the business of tomorrow and the basis
for future growth. However, this encompasses not only developing new trade
fairs, but also continuing to further enhance existing events.
■ Diversification – A road to growth that stretches far into the future. The idea
behind this is Messe Frankfurt’s goal to occupy and profitably develop trade
fair-related segments. With its Messe Frankfurt Medien und Service GmbH
subsidiary, it is already involved in publishing and stand construction activities.
New structures in Germany and abroad
With the spin-off of its venue operations to Messe Frankfurt Venue GmbH&Co. KG– a property management company responsible for the Frankfurt exhibitiongrounds, its marketing, construction, infrastructure and services – in 2003,Messe Frankfurt had initiated the restructuring process of the group. In autumn 2004 the new structure was completed: with retroactive effect from 1 January, the exhibition operations were also spun off to the managementcompany Messe Frankfurt Exhibition GmbH, which is in charge of all own eventsin Germany and abroad, all foreign subsidiaries as well as the German eventsubsidiaries Mesago Messe Frankfurt GmbH and Messe Frankfurt Ausstellun-gen GmbH. Under the roof of a joint holding company, Messe Frankfurt GmbH,two independent companies each with their own core competencies have thusbeen established. With this new organisational structure, Messe Frankfurthas not only created greater transparency, it has also opened up new perspec-tives, since the greater flexibility provides more scope for possible partner-ships and alliances.
At the end of 2004, Messe Frankfurt had more than 20 foreign subsidiariesand branch offices as well as 49 foreign agencies operating for a total of 151countries. The Asian subsidiaries in Tokyo, Mumbai and Seoul were, along-side the companies in Shanghai and Hong Kong, placed under the control ofMesse Frankfurt Asia Holding Ltd. established in 2003 with headquarters inHong Kong. The Singapore subsidiary was closed as planned; however,Messe Frankfurt is still represented in this market through a foreign agency.
58 59
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Management Report and Financial Statements Group Management Report Messe Frankfurt GmbH 2004
Frankfurt was the venue for 41 trade fairs including 16 events organised by MesseFrankfurt Exhibition GmbH, four by the Messe Frankfurt Ausstellungen GmbHsubsidiary and one event by Mesago Messe Frankfurt GmbH. These 21 owngroup events recorded more than 26,000 exhibitors, a rise of 16 per cent overthe previous year. Around 973,000 visitors, that is 18 per cent more than in 2003,were registered at these events. The leased net area was 18 per cent higherthan last year at just under 1.1 million square metres. Measured against 2002,which by virtue of the rotation of events is more readily comparable to 2004,the three benchmark indicators – exhibitors, visitors, net leased area – were atapproximately the same level.
The persistently difficult economic situation in Germany led in the case ofsome trade fairs to a reduction in the number of domestic exhibitors and visi-tors. By virtue of the high share of international exhibitors and visitors at theFrankfurt flagship shows, it was, however, possible to compensate for thisrelatively well. At 68 per cent, the level of internationalism on the exhibitor sidereached a historic high (after 63 per cent in 2003).
An average of 53 per cent share of foreign exhibitors was reached for Germantrade fair venues in general. Hence Messe Frankfurt was able to further widenits lead in terms of internationalism.
The same can be said of the visitor side: 35 per cent of the trade fair visitorsin 2004 travelled to Frankfurt from abroad, four percentage points more thanin 2003. This also represented a new record level, which even more clearly thanbefore lies above the national average for Germany (23 per cent).
In Brazil, Messe Frankfurt do Brasil acquired the remaining 50 per cent of theshares in Guazzelli Messe Frankfurt Ltda. The two companies were merged toform the new company Messe Frankfurt Feiras Ltda. Messe Frankfurt hopesthis consolidation will among other things result in a better utilisation of ad-ministrative synergies and hence a tangible reduction in costs, as well asgreater market acceptance thanks to uniform public relations. Messe FrankfurtExhibition GmbH’s holding in Mesago Messe Frankfurt Corp. in Japan wasalso increased by 20 per cent to 80 per cent.
Performance ratios
Fairs and exhibitions
The Messe Frankfurt group staged 109 trade fairs and exhibitions around theglobe in 2004 which attracted 57,700 exhibitors and 2.3 million visitors and cov-ered a net leased area of 1.7 million square metres. These were complementedby 237 congresses and events at the Frankfurt venue with around 535,000 visitors.
Events Exhibitors Net area* Visitors (in thousand m2) (in thousands)
Trade fairs and exhibitions
at the Frankfurt venue 41 39,638 1,348 1,505
at other venues in Germany 9 2,593 69 82
Total Germany 50 42,231 1,417 1,587
Abroad 59 15,486 323 750
Total trade fairs and exhibitions 109 57,717 1,740 2,337
Other events 237 535
Total activities 346 57,717 1,740 2,872
* including special show space
Overall activities of Messe Frankfurt in 2004
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Management Report and Financial Statements Group Management Report Messe Frankfurt GmbH 2004
Congresses, events and Festhalle events
With 136 events and 108,000 visitors, the 2004 conference year was – along-side 2001, the year of the German Kirchentag (Church Congress) – the bestyear in terms of sales and total number of events since the Congress Centerwas opened in 1997. The main focal themes were events from the IT, bankingand finance sectors, as well as medicine and science, for example the DeutscheSparkassentag (German Savings Bank Meeting) with 3,500 participants, Interpharm with 4,200 participants and the Deutsche Schmerztag (GermanInterdisciplinary Pain Congress) with around 2,000 participants.
Highlights were experienced especially in the Festhalle in a mix out of tra-dition and modernity at 58 events and gala evenings with more than 419,000visitors and many international stars. Apart from the traditional annualSports Ball, appearances by Sting, Sarah Brightman and Phil Collins, as wellas the Frankfurt Marathon, were the climaxes in 2004.
Guest events have always been very important in Frankfurt. The biggestand most well-known of these – the Book Fair, the International Motor ShowIAA Cars and ACHEMA – are international showcases for their respectivebranches and in some cases also crowd pullers with a high media impact.Messe Frankfurt intends to step up its acquisition activities for high-calibreguest events in the future, among other things in order to better utilise thecapacities of the exhibition grounds on a long-term basis.
In 2004, fewer guest events were held as the IAA and ACHEMA were missingby rotation from the trade fair calendar. A total of 20 guest fairs were held at theFrankfurt venue, including successful classics such as Book Fair and Euromold.The spectrum of guest events encompassed a broad thematic bandwidthranging from architecture via banking and mechanical engineering throughto tourism. With a total of 13,300 exhibitors and more than 530,000 visitors,the guest events contributed significantly to Messe Frankfurt’s success.
A further nine events organised by Messe Frankfurt Ausstellungen andMesago Messe Frankfurt at various venues throughout Germany bring thetotal of trade fairs staged in Germany to 50, with some 42,000 exhibitorsand 1.6 million visitors recorded.
Foreign operations in the reporting year showed a positive trend. MesseFrankfurt launched eleven new events, five in China alone, two each in Ar-gentina and Dubai and one new trade fair each in Korea and Moscow. Thenumber of trade fairs organised by the subsidiaries overseas totalled 59.Exhibitor numbers were up by around 2,100 exhibitors compared to theprevious year to nearly 15,500 companies, although one event less washeld in 2004 than in 2003. Around 750,000 visitors were counted, approxi-mately 1.4 per cent fewer than in 2003.
Number of fairs in Germany and abroad
■ Trade fairs in Germany
■ Overseas trade fairs
120
110
100
90
80
70
60
50
40
30
20
10
02000 2001 2002 2003 2004
8986
96
112109
46
43
38
48
51
45
52
60
50
59
62
4➔
Management Report and Financial Statements Group Management Report Messe Frankfurt GmbH 2004
Modernisation of the venue
The first step in the modernisation of the Frankfurt exhibition grounds was thecompletion at the end of 2004 of the new “Dependence” offices and servicesbuilding. With a gross floor space of approx. 17,000 square metres it wasdesigned – like the adjacent Hall 3 – by the British architect Nicholas Grimshawand accommodates around 300 employees of the Accente GastronomieService GmbH subsidiary and Messe Frankfurt itself. The heart of the Accenteheadquarters is a new large-scale and fully equipped state-of-the-art kitchen.This permits Accente to prepare up to 3,000 meals a day for the 25 restaurantsacross the complex, 14,000 open rolls for the Mini-Pic stands in the halls andanother 3,000 meals for the catering service. Like this, the gastronomy sub-sidiary is able not only to better meet the gastronomic needs of the trade fairvisitors, but also to generate growth beyond the Frankfurt trade fair activities.
With the conclusion of a contract of purchase for the western section of theformer goods station in August 2004, Messe Frankfurt paved the way forextensive new building projects. This is not aimed at creating additional hallcapacities, but at modernising and making the Frankfurt exhibition venuemore attractive. Step by step from 2006, two to three new halls will be built,enabling older halls such as Halls 5 and 6 to be modernised without interferingwith trade fair operations more than is necessary.
63
Sales
The successful 2004 business year is mirrored in the increase in group sales.At around e 364.5 million, group sales reached a new all-time high in thecompany’s history. The increase compared to the prior period amounted toaround e 11.2 million, or 3.2 per cent. Compared to 2002, which by virtue ofthe event structure lends itself better to comparison, this corresponds to anincrease of as much as e 29.7 million or 8.9 per cent.
The greatest share in the sales of the corporate group before consolidationwas achieved by the parent company, Messe Frankfurt GmbH, Messe FrankfurtVenue GmbH & Co. KG and Messe Frankfurt Exhibition GmbH. Separate re-porting of operative business for the respective companies shows that sales ofthe parent company went down from e 195.5 million in 2002 to e 34.5 millionin 2004. The remaining sales result from the provision of central administrativeservices for the subsidiaries in Frankfurt and are also the main reason for therise in inter-company sales within the group to e 190.8 million. By contrast, MesseFrankfurt Venue GmbH & Co. KG posted sales amounting to e 150.0 million (e 165.2 million in 2003) and Messe Frankfurt Exhibition GmbH sales amountingto e 213.3 million. The lower sales of Messe Frankfurt Venue GmbH & Co. KGcompared to the prior period can be chiefly accounted for by the fact that thebig guest events IAA and ACHEMA were missing by rotation from the eventscalendar in the reporting year.
II. Situation report
Increase in sales of the event subsidiaries in Germany and abroad
e m
64 65
4➔
Management Report and Financial Statements Group Management Report Messe Frankfurt GmbH 2004
Mesago Messe Frankfurt GmbH, which has been included in the scope of con-solidation for the past three years, contributed to group sales with e 14.1 million(+ e 1.9 million) and Messe Frankfurt Ausstellungen GmbH with e 6.1 million(– e2.8 million). The service company Messe Frankfurt Medien und Service GmbHachieved new record sales of e 27.9 million despite there being fewer events.This reflects the positive revenues generated by the catalogue business takenover in 2003. At e 22.4 million, Accente Gastronomie Service GmbH recordedlower sales than last year by virtue of the number of events; compared to thebetter 2002 benchmark, however, it posted a further increase of e 3.1 million.
Business was also very encouraging on the international front. With a total ofe 73.7 million, the sales of the foreign subsidiaries was e 17.4 million or 31 percent higher than in the preceding period. This rise can be explained especiallyby the positive development of trade fair activities in China (+ e 8.4 million),Argentina (+ e 4.1 million) and Dubai (+ e 2.9 million). The development in Argentina was positively influenced above all by the successful staging of theWorld Climate Conference. The main driving forces of sales were the sub-sidiaries in Hong Kong/China (e 22.1 million), Paris (e 10.6 million) Atlanta (e 7.8million) and Tokyo (e 6.4 million). The share of the foreign subsidiaries ingroup sales was around 20 per cent compared to16 per cent in the previous year.
■ Europe
■ Asia
■ America
100
90
80
70
60
50
40
30
20
10
0
77.3
2000 2004200320022001
16.5
23.6
37.2
43.746.1
93,8
19.312.7 11.7
32.7
22.7 23.1
41.8
8.3 11.3
69.2
16.8
24.4
28.0
93.8
Increase in sales 2002 – 2004
Change compared to
Germany 2002 2003 2004 2003 2002em em gm in % in %
Messe Frankfurt GmbH, Frankfurt 256.8 195.5 34.5 – 82.4 – 86.6
Messe Frankfurt Exhibition GmbH, Frankfurt 213.3 ++ ++
Messe Frankfurt Venue GmbH & Co. KG, Frankfurt 165.2 150.0 – 9.2 ++
Messe Frankfurt Ausstellungen GmbH, Wiesbaden 5.9 8.9 6.1 – 31.5 3.4
Mesago Messe Frankfurt GmbH, Stuttgart 1) 12.8 12.2 14.1 15.6 10.2
Messe Frankfurt Medien und Service GmbH, Frankfurt 22.4 25.9 27.9 7.7 24.6
Accente Gastronomie Service GmbH, Frankfurt 19.3 24.7 22.4 – 9.3 16.1
Messe Frankfurt Grundbesitz GmbH & Co. KG, Frankfurt 12.7 13.1 13.4 2.3 5.5
Abroad
Messe Frankfurt France S.A.S., Paris 6.2 9.5 10.6 11.6 71.0
Messe Frankfurt Italia Srl., Milan 2.2 2.3 2.5 8.7 13.6
Messe Frankfurt Istanbul L.S., Istanbul 0.6 1.0 1.0 0.0 66.7
O.O.O. Messe Frankfurt RUS, Moscow 0.3 0.9 2.3 ++ ++
EPOC Messe Frankfurt GmbH, Frankfurt /Dubai 2.4 5.2 ++ ++
Messe Frankfurt Asia Holding Ltd., Hong Kong 1) 14.4 32.7 ++ ++
Messe Frankfurt (H.K.) Ltd., Hong Kong 2) 15.5 -- --
Messe Frankfurt (Shanghai) Co. Ltd., Shanghai 2) 0.5 -- --
Mesago Messe Frankfurt Corp., Tokyo 2) 5.3 5.2 -- --
Messe Frankfurt Korea Ltd., Seoul 2) 0.8 1.4 -- --
Messe Frankfurt Trade Fairs India Pvt. Ltd., Mumbai 2) 2.2 2.2 -- --
Messe Frankfurt Singapore Pte. Ltd., Singapore 0.1 0.4 -- --
Messe Frankfurt Inc., Atlanta 11.4 9.5 7.8 –17.9 – 31.6
Messe Frankfurt Mexico S. de R. L. de C.V., Mexico City 3.4 3.4 3.5 2.9 2.9
Messe Frankfurt Feiras Ltda., São Paulo 3) 2.0 2.5 2.8 12.0 40.0
Indexport Messe Frankfurt S.A., Buenos Aires 1.1 5.2 ++ ++
Inter-company sales – 45.6 –148.4 –190.8 28.6 ++
Group sales 334.8 353.3 364.5 3.2 8.9
1) Sub-group 2) from 2003 or 2004 included in sub-group
Messe Frankfurt Asia Holding Ltd.3) until 2003 sub-group Messe Frankfurt do Brasil
66 67
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Management Report and Financial Statements Group Management Report Messe Frankfurt GmbH 2004
Operating result
With a figure of e 33.5 million prior to taxes on income, the consolidated group’sprofit was e 10.2 million or 43.8 per cent above the previous year’s level. Thereasons for this, apart from the increases in sales (+ e 11.2 million) and otheroperating income (+ e 6.4 million), were savings especially in the field of con-sulting and general administrative expenses (– e 6.4 million) as well as an al-most constant level of expenses for events and personnel. Only depreciation,amortisation and write-downs were significantly higher than in the previousyear by e 15.2 million and led to total expenses of e 348.2 million (e 339.3million in 2003). In the case of the financial result, lower interest expensesabove all led to an improvement over the previous year by e 1.4 million. Taking taxes on income into consideration, the group posted a net incomefor the financial year of e 19.4 million.
If the earnings ratio EBITDA (Earnings before Interest, Taxes, Depreciation andAmortisation) is taken into consideration, Messe Frankfurt achieved its bestresult so far. Compared to the previous years, this represents increases of e 24.0 million (+ 33.7 per cent) and e 19.0 million (+ 24.9 per cent) respectively.Related to sales, the EBITDA margin is 26 per cent.
The parent company, Messe Frankfurt GmbH, contributed e 13.9 million to groupincome before consolidation. This includes in particular income from long-terminvestments amounting to e 13.0 million. Drawing up an independent balancesheet for the first time, Messe Frankfurt Exhibition GmbH posted a net incomefor the financial year of e 21.4 million. This figure includes e 8.7 million capitalgains arising from the transfer of the subsidiaries in Japan, Korea and India tothe Asia Holding founded in 2003. However, these intra-group unrealised profitsare to be eliminated again within the scope of consolidation.
The earnings situation of the German and overseas subsidiaries of MesseFrankfurt Exhibition GmbH showed a very positive development. With an over-all result of e 8.3 million, the event subsidiaries – especially in Asia – make asignificant contribution to the consolidated earnings of the Messe Frankfurtgroup. Only Mexico and Brazil posted scheduled losses due to the difficultmarket situation. Particularly encouraging was the operating result of MesseFrankfurt (H.K.) Limited in Hong Kong, which with e 4.7 million (e 1.4 million in2003) contributed significantly to improving group earnings. This also appliesto Mesago Messe Frankfurt in Stuttgart, Messe Frankfurt France S.A.S., MesseFrankfurt Trade Fairs India and EPOC Messe Frankfurt with its branch office in Dubai.
Messe Frankfurt Venue GmbH & Co. KG generated a net loss for the financialyear of e 4.0 million. The main reason for this was an impairment loss on theTorhaus administrative building that became necessary because of a revalua-tion following a special building control. This was countered – on the basis ofprofit and loss transfer agreements – by the positive results of Messe FrankfurtMedien und Service GmbH and Accente Gastronomie Service GmbH in the yearunder review, as well as a profit distribution by Accente Gastronomie ServiceGmbH in the previous year.
Profit development 2002 – 2004
Change compared to2002 2003 2004 2003 2002e ‘000 e ‘000 e ‘000 in % in %
Result before taxes on income 32,169 23,272 33,458 43.8 4.0
Taxes on income 10,455 13,055 14,023 7.4 34.1
Group net income for the financial year 21,714 10,217 19,435 90.2 –10.5
EBITDA 2002 – 2004
Change compared to2002 2003 2004 2003 2002e ‘000 e ‘000 e ‘000 in e ‘000 in e ‘000
Group net income for the year 21,714 10,217 19,435 9,218 – 2,279
Taxes on income 10,455 13,055 14,023 968 3,568
Less financial result –1,338 –(– 999) – 367 –1,366 971
Depreciation, amortisation and write-downs 45,328 46,900 62,068 15,168 16,740
Group EBITDA 76,159 71,171 95,158 23,987 18,999
68 69
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Management Report and Financial Statements Lagebericht und Konzernlagebericht 2002Group Management Report Messe Frankfurt GmbH 2004
68
Financial and assets position
The fixed assets of the Messe Frankfurt group are made up primarily of landand buildings as well as trade fair rights and goodwill. In the year under review, additional investments were made amounting to some e 34.4 million.These were to a large part accounted for by the remaining construction costsfor the new Dependence offices and services building as well as its facilities(e 12.3 million). For the downpayment on the land purchase as well as for the redesign of the outside facilities, additional smaller infrastructure measures,improvements in the gastronomy segment and diverse operating equipmentand IT systems, e 19.1 million was invested.
As a result of amortisation amounting to e 62.1 million, a value of e 519.6 million(e 549.8 million in 2003) is accounted for in the balance sheet under fixed assetsat year’s end 2004, which corresponds to a share of almost 71 per cent of thetotal assets.
The rise in current assets by e 59.9 million to e 212.3 million results inparticular from a higher level of securities (e 50.9 million) and cash-in-hand (e 118.1 million).
On the equity and liabilities side, on the basis of the agreed allocations ofunappropriated profits (increase of the revenue reserves by e 41.4 million anda distribution to the shareholders of around e 13 million) and the earned net
income for the 2004 financial year, a value of e 319.5 million is posted underequity, which is e 4.8 million higher than the previous year’s figure (e 314.7 mil-lion). This corresponds to an equity ratio of around 44 per cent and leads to an equity-to-fixed assets ratio of around 61 per cent. In conjunction with the equity-similar special reserve for subsidies or grants for the acquisition of fixed assets (e 44.7 million) as well as deferred income with e 57 million, which isalso available on a long-term basis, this percentage increases to 81 per cent.
Apart from the separately disclosed provisions for pensions and taxes, otherprovisions (e 50.8 million) primarily includes provisions for outstanding mainte-nance measures, unsettled invoices, indemnification claims from commercialagents and claims from employees. On the basis of the present risk assess-ment, no additional provisions were formed for other risks which may arise asa result of the current external audit.
Liabilities (e 228.9 million) are characterised especially by payments receivedon account of e 113.6 million (+ e 22.1 million) for events in 2005, as well asliabilities to banks amounting to e 88.5 million (– e 5 million).
21.8
24.6
28.4
11.8
21.7
10.5
32.2
46.4
40.2
70
60
50
40
30
20
10
0
6.6 %
12.7 %
9.6 %
14.9 %
2000 2004200320022001
Earnings before taxes on income and pre-tax return on sales 2000-2004
e m
10.2
13.1
23.3
19.4
14.0
33.5
9.2 %
Pre-tax return on sales
Profit before taxes on income
■ Net income for the financial year
■ Income taxes
2003 2004
732.5
169.0
43.9
519.6
2003Assets Equity &Liabilities
2004
57.0
140.5
88.5
82.3
44.7
319.5
732.5
706.4
107.4
49.2
549.8
57.3
121.8
93.5
72.2
46.9
314.7
706.4
Year-for-year comparison of group balance sheet structure
e m
Assets
■ Fixed assets
■ Receivables and other current assets
■ Liquid assets and securities
Equity & Liabilities
■ Equity
■ Special reserve
■ Provisions
■ Bank loans
■ Other liabilities
■ Deferred income
4➔
Management Report and Financial Statements Group Management Report Messe Frankfurt GmbH 2004
Financing
Investments were financed by existing liquidity and the positive cash flow.As the sum of the net income for the year, depreciation, amortisation andwrite-downs and the changes in provisions for pensions, a cash flow of e 78.1 million resulted after deduction of the non-liquidity-related reversalof the special reserve for subsidies or grants for the acquisition of fixed assetsand of deferred income. Thus it was e 25.3 million (47.8 per cent) higher inthe year under review than last year’s figure.
70 71
Human resources
As at 31.12.2004, 1,227 people were employed in the Messe Frankfurt consoli-dated group worldwide, 14 more than at the end of 2003.
Within the framework of the spin-off of Messe Frankfurt Exhibition GmbH,operational functions were reassigned and respective employees transferredwithin the group. At the Frankfurt venue, the human resources consolidationpolicy initiated in the previous year was consistently pursued. This also appliesto the German subsidiaries with the exception of Accente Gastronomie Service GmbH, which registered a slight increase due to the beginning ofoperation of the production facility in the new Dependence services building.Overseas, our expansion of operations in Argentina, China and Dubai (EPOCMesse Frankfurt GmbH) led to a rise in the number of employees. In thiscontext, our Hong Kong subsidiary took over the activities in Singapore fol-lowing the closure of our company there. Advantage was taken of the merger of
Statement of cash flow 2002 – 2004
Changes in 2004 compared to
2002 2003 2004 2003 2002e ‘000 e ‘000 e ‘000 in % in %
Net income for the financial year 21,714 10,217 19,435 90.2 –10.5
Depreciation, amortisation and write-downs 45,328 46,900 62,068 32.3 36.9
Provisions for pensions –148 –2 882 ++ ++
Reversal of special reserve and deferred income – 4,247 – 4,247 – 4,247 0.0 0.0
Group cash flow 62,647 52,868 78,137 47.8 24.7
the two subsidiaries in Brazil to form Messe Frankfurt Feiras Ltda. to reorganiseand trim the number of employees. The marginal differences compared tothe previous year result from the influence of natural fluctuation on a cut-offday approach.
As in the previous years, we further raised the number of our trainees from19 to 28 as a symbolic gesture within the framework of our general economicresponsibility. Like this, we hope to contribute to providing young people inGermany with promising future prospects. With a 60 per cent share of womenamong the workforce, our quota of part-time staff in Germany has in the mean-time risen to 12 per cent.
In anticipation of the relevant collective bargaining in the public services sector,Messe Frankfurt began to further develop the existing working hours models inorder on the one hand to optimise the deployment of resources in the interestsof customer orientation, and on the other hand to offer our employees thegreatest possible autonomy in organising their working hours. In order topromote integration within the Messe Frankfurt group, the human resourcesmanagement services offer was extended by the holding company to encom-pass the foreign subsidiaries.
In response to the demands of the market, human resources developmentcontinued to be a focus of activities. The programmes for developing execu-tive manager potential and demand-driven qualification measures were sys-tematically and consistently continued. Messe Frankfurt considers the contin-uous investment in its employees to be a vital factor of success for the company,especially since like this, as well as enhancing employee competence, itmanages to tie key individuals to the company on a long-term basis.
In a continuing difficult market situation, the employees of the Messe Frankfurtcorporate group once again demonstrated in 2004 that with a lot of motivationas well as unswerving and flexible efforts, notable successes can be achievedof which we can be justifiably proud. The Board of Management would like totake this opportunity to thank all employees for the good work done in the periodunder review. Thanks are also due to the works council for its constructivecooperation.
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Management Report and Financial Statements Group Management Report Messe Frankfurt GmbH 2004
73
In line with the Act on Corporate Control and Transparency (KonTraG), theMesse Frankfurt group in 1999 consolidated all the measures taken withinthe company to control risk in a uniform and consistent risk managementsystem which also encompasses the subsidiaries. Early-warning signals weredefined to enable risks in future development to be identified in a timelymanner. These include, for example, developments in the industry, activitiesby competitors and exhibitor and visitor development.
The risk management manual defines in particular the risk principles, therisk management process and the documentation and monitoring of the riskmanagement system. Risk management is conceived as a continuous processand is reviewed at regular intervals to ensure appropriateness.
Risks arise especially for the German retail trade and the respective retailtrade-related trade fairs as a result of the ongoing economic recession inGermany. It is also to be expected that the uncertainties kindled by terroristattacks will on the one hand continue to limit the propensity of internationalexhibitors and visitors to travel and on the other hand negatively impact futureeconomic development.
Messe Frankfurt Venue GmbH & Co. KG is attempting to counter the funda-mental capacity utilisation risk that is intensified through the additionallycreated hall capacities of its competitors by initiating long-term customerretention strategies. In addition, a high standard of service and quality –combined with a moderate price policy – and a continuous improvement ininternal processes are intended to secure the long-term competitiveness ofthe Frankfurt trade fair venue.
Other than these, no risks that pose a threat to the existence or future de-velopment of the company are anticipated.
Human resources development
2002 2003 2004
Messe Frankfurt GmbH, Frankfurt am Main 695 479 221
Messe Frankfurt Exhibition GmbH, Frankfurt am Main 245
Messe Frankfurt Venue GmbH & Co. KG, Frankfurt am Main 229 236
Mesago Messe Frankfurt GmbH, Stuttgart 55 57 57
Messe Frankfurt Ausstellungen GmbH, Wiesbaden 30 31 33
Messe Frankfurt Medien und Service GmbH, Frankfurt am Main 42 56 59
Accente Gastronomie Service GmbH, Frankfurt am Main 100 98 104
Germany 922 950 955
Messe Frankfurt France S.A.S., Paris, France 8 10 10
Messe Frankfurt Italia Srl., Milan, Italy 12 14 15
Messe Frankfurt Istanbul L.S., Turkey 7 10 10
O.O.O. Messe Frankfurt RUS, Moscow, Russia 12 15 15
EPOC Messe Frankfurt GmbH, Frankfurt /Dubai 12 17 21
Messe Frankfurt (H.K.) Ltd., Hong Kong, China 42 50 74
Messe Frankfurt (Shanghai) Co. Ltd., Shanghai, China 12 12 –
Mesago Messe Frankfurt Corp., Tokyo, Japan 15 15 17
Messe Frankfurt Korea Ltd., Seoul, South Korea 6 6 7
Messe Frankfurt Trade Fairs India Pvt. Ltd., Mumbai, India 16 13 13
Messe Frankfurt Singapore Pte. Ltd., Singapore 5 4 –
Messe Frankfurt Inc., Atlanta, USA 24 23 22
Messe Frankfurt Mexico S. de R.L. de C.V., Mexico City, Mexico 15 15 14
Messe Frankfurt Feiras Ltda., São Paulo, Brazil 34 31 22
Indexport Messe Frankfurt S.A., Buenos Aires, Argentina 28 32
Abroad 220 263 272
Messe Frankfurt Group 1,142 1,213 1,227
Increase in number of employees 71 14
72
III. Risk management
74 75
4➔
Management Report and Financial Statements
Investments/Financing
As part of the further expansion of the site by Messe Frankfurt VenueGmbH & Co. KG, work is being started in 2005 on the traffic infrastructure.The first step in this plan is the widening of the “Emser Brücke” bridge, onwhich work is scheduled to commence in the spring. The total investmentvolume for the new halls including expenses for the external service roadsystem is expected to amount to a figure topping e 250 to over 300 millionover the next five years.
It will initially be possible (2005) to secure the financing of these particularinvestments through the company’s own cash flow. In the subsequent years,it will be necessary to draw on external funding to cover a part of the capitalrequirement.
The sale of part of the site of Hall 7, which was demolished at the beginningof 2005, will bring Messe Frankfurt a new neighbour. Between now and 2006,KIA Motors is constructing its new European headquarters on the approxi-mately 4,000 square metre site.
Operating result
A positive group result is expected both in 2005 and in subsequent years.
Business policy/Sales
For Germany, the ifo Institute for Economic Research is anticipating a re-strained but steady increase in production for 2005 (GDP in real terms: +1.0 per cent). According to the World Trade Organisation (WTO), the globaleconomy is expected to grow by 3 per cent. For world trade, the WTO fore-casts growth at twice that pace, namely 6.5 per cent.
Not least on the basis of this latter, for the trade fair sector favourable fore-cast, Messe Frankfurt GmbH – despite the moderate general economic con-ditions and the tougher competition within Germany and Europe – is lookingconfidently to the future. The sustained interest especially of foreign com-panies in the major trade fairs organised in particular by Messe FrankfurtExhibition GmbH in the spring of 2005 and the attendant demand for hallspace give reason for this optimism. Nevertheless, it is feared that in indi-vidual product areas there is likely to be a further drop in exhibitor numbersand sales at certain fairs. With new trade fairs at home and abroad, MesseFrankfurt is paving the way for future growth. The new Collectione consumergoods fair will debut in Frankfurt and the as yet young Material Vision, aconference and trade fair for innovative materials, will be further developed.Outside Germany, Interstoff Rossija in Moscow and Paperworld in Shanghaiwill celebrate their première.
Apart from developing new trade fair products, the company is also contin-uing to broaden its international scope and is examining various optionsfor partnerships in Germany and abroad.
Further growth – especially overseas –, internationalism and economic sound-ness are Messe Frankfurt’s priority goals. Apart from the core regions of itsoperations – Asia, and here above all China, Russia and the United ArabEmirates – it intends to intensify its activities on the American trade fair marketso as to further secure Messe Frankfurt’s pole position in the future.
Group sales in 2005 are expected to lie in the region of e 360 million. A furtherincrease is anticipated for 2006.
IV. Outlook
Group Management Report Messe Frankfurt GmbH 2004
Equity and Liabilities At 31.12.2004 At 31.12.2003Notes e e e ‘000
A. Equity (7)
I. Subscribed capital 180,000,000.00 180,000
II. Capital reserves 87,219,009.35 85,219
III. Revenue reservesOther revenue reserves 40,213,532.23 1,035
IV. Adjustment from currency translation –2,544,474.08 –1,285
V. Net retained profits 13,679,445.37 49,083
VI. Minority interest 957,175.10 643
319,524,687.97 314,695
B. Special reserve for subsidies or grants for the acquisition of fixed assets (8) 44,737,400.00 46,885
C. Provisions
Provisions for pensions and similar obligations 10,371,236.98 9,489
Provisions for taxes 21,147,829.28 12,129
Other provisions (9) 50,820,577.24 50,580
82,339,643.50 72,198
D. Liabilities (10)
Liabilities to banks 88,460,168.48 93,510
Payments received on account of orders 113,628,815.18 91,545
Trade payables 16,019,374.58 22,385
Liabilities to shareholders 355.83 1,074
Other liabilities 10,755,538.49 6,847– thereof taxes: e 1,763,682.89 (previous year e 2,389,000) – thereof social security: e 1,356,312.64 (previous year e 1,207,000)
228,864,252.56 215,361
E. Deferred income (11) 57,003,610.30 57,268
732,469,594.33 706,407
76 77
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Management Report and Financial Statements
Annual Financial Statements of the Messe Frankfurt GmbH Group
Consolidated balance sheet at 31 December 2004
Assets At 31.12.2004 At 31.12.2003Notes e e e ‘000
A. Fixed assets (1)
I. Intangible assets 31,004,002.23 39,614
II. Tangible assets 488,529,616.68 10,173
III. Financial assets 20,453.19 20
519,554,072.10 549,807
B. Current assets
I. Inventories (2) 650,421.95 574
II. Receivables and other assets
1. Trade receivables (3) 17,168,477.90 20,304
2. Receivables from shareholders 0.00 1
3. Other assets (4) 25,486,747.29 24,090
42,655,225.19 44,395
III. Securities (5) 50,923,345.29 15,080
IV. Cash-in-hand, bank balancesand cheques (6) 118,092,988.14 92,364
212,321,980.57 152,413
C. Prepaid expenses 593,541.66 4,187
732,469,594.33 706,407
78 79
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Management Report and Financial Statements
2004 2003Notes e e e ‘000 e ‘000
Sales (13) 364,494,027.70 353,310
Other operating income (14) 19,857,846.37 13,402
384,351,874.07 366,712
Event-related expenses (15) 170,316,634.39 171,452
Personnel expenses (16) 69,973,590.54 68,701
Amortisation of intangible fixed assets and depreciation of tangible fixed assets (17) 62,067,510.19 46,900
Other operating expenses (18) 45,878,794.20 52,267
348,236,529.32 339,320
Financial result (19) 366,834.51 – 999
Result from ordinary activities 36,482,179.26 26,393
Taxes (20) 17,047,457.39 16,175
Consolidated net income 19,434,721.87 10,218
Income accruing to other shareholders –1,285,785.53 –388
Loss accruing to other shareholders 0.00 87
Retained profits 49,082,707.61 47,257
Advance dividends on the result of the current period 0.00 –6,492
Allocation of unappropriated profit 2003 –12,960,000.00 0
Withdrawals from revenue reserves 22,200,000.00 0
Allocations to revenue reserves – 61,378,852.77 –6
Allocations to capital reserves – 2,000,000.00 0
Currency adjustment 586,654.19 –1,593
Consolidated net retained profits 13,679,445.37 49,083
Consolidated income statement of Messe Frankfurt GmbH
for the 2004 financial year
Annual Financial Statements of the Messe Frankfurt GmbH Group
Explanatory notes to the
consolidated financial statements
General information
The consolidated financial statements of Messe Frankfurt GmbH have beenprepared in accordance with the statutory requirements for consolidated financial statements and generally accepted accounting principles, whiletaking account of trade fair-related specificities.
Reporting entity structure
As well as Messe Frankfurt GmbH, Frankfurt am Main as the parent company,the consolidated financial statements also embrace the following subsidiariesMesse Frankfurt Exhibition GmbH, Frankfurt am MainMesse Frankfurt Venue GmbH & Co. KG, Frankfurt am MainMesse Frankfurt Medien und Service GmbH, Frankfurt am Main Accente Gastronomie Service GmbH, Frankfurt am Main Messe Frankfurt Grundbesitz Verwaltung GmbH, Frankfurt am Main Messe Frankfurt Grundbesitz GmbH & Co. KG, Frankfurt am Main EPOC Messe Frankfurt GmbH, Frankfurt am MainMesse Frankfurt Ausstellungen GmbH, WiesbadenMesago Messe Frankfurt GmbH, StuttgartMesse Frankfurt Italia Srl., Milan/ Italy Messe Frankfurt France S.A.S., Paris /FranceO.O.O. Messe Frankfurt RUS, Moscow/RussiaMesse Frankfurt Istanbul L.S., Istanbul /TurkeyMesse Frankfurt Asia Holding Ltd., Hong Kong/China Messe Frankfurt (H.K.) Ltd., Hong Kong/ChinaMesago Messe Frankfurt Corporation, Tokyo/Japan Messe Frankfurt Korea Ltd., Seoul /South KoreaMesse Frankfurt Trade Fairs India Pvt. Ltd., Mumbai / IndiaMesse Frankfurt Inc., Atlanta/USA Messe Frankfurt Mexico S. de R.L. de C.V. Mexico City/MexicoMesse Frankfurt Feiras Ltda., São Paulo/Brasil Indexport Messe Frankfurt S.A., Buenos Aires/Argentinawhich are either collectively managed by Messe Frankfurt GmbH or in whichMesse Frankfurt GmbH directly or indirectly holds the majority of voting rights.
The 100 per cent shares held by Mesago Messe Frankfurt GmbH, Stuttgart inMesago Messemanagement GmbH, Stuttgart, ZM Communications GmbH,International Publishing, Conferences, Markting, Nuremberg, as well as anadditional holding are also included in the consolidated financial statement
80 81
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Management Report and Financial Statements Annual Financial Statements of the Messe Frankfurt GmbH Group
on the basis of sub-group accounts. SMT/ASIC/Hybrid Mesago Messe &Kongress GmbH & Co. oHG is managed jointly by Mesago Messe Frankfurt GmbHand an enterprise not included in the consolidated financial statements and istherefore included with 75 per cent in the consolidated financial statements inproportion to the shares of capital held (Section 310 HGB – German CommercialCode). In addition,one associated company in whichMesagoMessemanagementholds an indirect share of 50 per cent was included in the consolidated financialstatements pursuant to Section 312 HGB (Commercial Code).
In the reporting year, the Asian subsidiaries Messe Frankfurt Trade Fairs IndiaPvt. Ltd., Mumbai/India, Messe Frankfurt Korea Ltd., Seoul/South Korea andMesago Messe Frankfurt Corporation, Tokyo/Japan were additionally sold toMesse Frankfurt Asia Holding Ltd., Hong Kong/China, founded on 27.12.2003,with the subsidiaries Messe Frankfurt (H.K.) Ltd., Hong Kong/China and MesseFrankfurt (Shanghai) Co. Ltd., Shanghai/China.
In 2004, Messe Frankfurt do Brasil Ltda., São Paulo acquired the remaining50 per cent shares held by the Guazzelli family in Guazzelli Feiras MesseFrankfurt Ltda., São Paulo. Following the acquisition, the company was renamedMesse Frankfurt Feiras Ltda., São Paulo. On the cut-off date 30.12.2004, MesseFrankfurt do Brasil Ltda., São Paulo, was merged with Messe Frankfurt FeirasLtda., São Paulo. The financial statements of Messe Frankfurt GmbH at 31.12.2004include Messe Frankfurt Feiras Ltda, São Paulo.
Following the consolidation in South America, Indexport S.A. – Messe Frankfurtdo Brasil Ltda. UTE was wound up.
In the reporting year, Messe Frankfurt Asia Holding Ltd., Hong Kong acquiredthe 20 per cent interest of FAI AG, Switzerland in Mesago Messe Frankfurt Corp.,Tokyo/Japan, so that it now holds a share of 80 per cent.
The changes in the reporting entity structure have not resulted in any materialchanges.
An adjustment item is shown under Equity as “Minority interest” to indicateshares held by other shareholders in the equity capital posted to the balancesheet of a fully consolidated company.
Consolidation principles
The reference date for the consolidated financial statements as well as allincorporated subsidiaries is 31 December.
The assets and liabilities of the companies included in the consolidated financial statements were drawn up according to the accounting and valua-tion policies applicable for the group as a whole.
The incorporated companies are accounted for using the book-value acqui-sition method by eliminating the acquisition cost of equity investmentsagainst the pro rata equity capital at the time of acquisition. Intercompanyreceivables, liabilities, expenses and revenue were offset. Interim results wereeliminated. The equity of the subsidiaries included in the group is translatedat historical cost. Resulting currency differences are recognised directly inEquity under Currency translation adjustments.
Where acquisition accounting resulted in goodwill, this was amortised on a scheduled basis in conformance with Section 309, Sub-section 1 HGB(Commercial Code) over the term of the relevant contract or over a usefullife of 15 years or on a non-scheduled basis at the recoverable amount on thebalance sheet date. The associated company was recognised at book valuein conformance with Section 302 HGB (Commercial Code) on the basis of thevaluation rates at the time of acquisition of the shares.
Accounting and valuation policies, currency translation
The consolidated financial statements were prepared in compliance withthe German Accounting Standards (DRS) applicable for the reporting yearprovided that these do not inhibit statutory options and do not require additional disclosures not mandatory by law.
Intangible assets and tangible assets acquired against payment are statedat cost, less accumulated amortisation and depreciation for wear and tear
83
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Management Report and Financial Statements
82
Annual Financial Statements of the Messe Frankfurt GmbH Group
as well as any non-scheduled write-downs and special allowances undertax law. Depreciation for wear and tear is calculated on a straight-line basison the basis of unchanged principles. In the case of new additions in theperiod 1989 to 1993, use was made of the right to opt for a higher deprecia-tion value for buildings in accordance with Section 7, Sub-section 5 EStG(Income Tax Law). New additions from 2004 will be written off pro rata tem-poris. Assets of minor value are written off in full in the year of acquisition.
Financial assets are stated at cost or the recoverable value, whichever islower.
Inventories are stated at acquisition or production cost – using permittedvaluation simplification procedures – or at the lower of cost and net realis-able value. In the case of trade and other receivables, recognised individualrisks are accounted for through valuation adjustments. As in the previousyear, no general bad-debt provisions were formed in the reporting period.
Other assets are shown in the balance sheet at nominal value. Securitieswere valued at historical cost or at the recoverable value, whichever is lower.Liquid funds are disclosed at the nominal amount.
Pension provisions are valued according to the Projected Unit Credit Methodin line with IAS 19. Based on the “1998 Mortality Tables” and the “1988Morbidity Tables” published by Dr Klaus Heubeck, an interest rate of 5.5 percent p.a. as well as a rate of pension progression of 3.0 per cent p.a. and aqualification trend of 4.0 per cent p.a. were assumed.
No pension progressions, employment trends or fluctuations were takeninto account with respect to provisions for pension obligations arising fromdeferred compensation. Based on the “1998 Mortality Tables” and the“1988 Morbidity Tables” published by Dr Klaus Heubeck, an interest rate of4.9 per cent was assumed.
Other provisions take account of all recognisable risks and contingent obli-gations. Provisions are also formed for necessary maintenance work wherescheduled events prevent this from being carried out in the period under review. Provisions have also been set aside for possible indemnification claimsby commercial agents. The provisions were formed in a sufficient extent tocover the anticipated claims. Provisions for pre-retirement part-time em-ployment as well as provisions for seniority were formed on the basis of the“1998 Mortality Tables” drawn up by Dr Klaus Huebeck with an interest rateof 5.5 per cent.
Liabilities are valued at their repayment amount.Receivables and liabilities in foreign currencies are translated at the mid-rateon the acquisition date or cut-off date in accordance with the lower- or higher-of-cost-or-market principle. End-of-year financial statements of the foreignsubsidiaries prepared in a foreign currency are translated at the (mid) rate onthe qualifying date.
Incurred costs for press, advertising and public relations work for events in subsequent years were posted throughout the group as expenses in thereporting year.
Notes to the consolidated balance sheet
(Values in e ‘000 unless otherwise indicated)
(1) Fixed assets
The breakdown of the fixed asset items contained in the consolidated balancesheet and their development trend (Statement of Changes in Group FixedAssets) in 2004 is attached to the notes.
A breakdown of share ownership at 31.12.2004 has been placed with theCommercial Register of the District Court of Frankfurt am Main under num-ber HRB 6640.
(2) Inventories
This covers consumables and supplies.
84 85
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Management Report and Financial Statements Annual Financial Statements of the Messe Frankfurt GmbH Group
(3) Trade receivables
Amounts due with a residual term of more than one year are not included inthis item.
(4) Other assets
up to one year more than one year
Taxes 15,575 0
Prepayments 3,524 0
Other 1) 5,496 892
Total for 2004 24,595 892
Total for 2003 22,848 1,242
1) Includes f 1,400,000 for resale of certain canteen equipment
(5) Securities
Securities include shares in annuity and real estate funds, shares in moneymarket funds, commercial papers and fixed interest-bearing securities.
(6) Cash-in-hand, bank balances
2004 2003
Cash-in-hand 394 354
Bank balance 1) 117,699 92,010
118,093 92,364
1) To cover the liability of an affiliated company, an amount of f 256,000 was lodged as security.
up to one year up to five years more than 5 years
Liabilities to banks1) 313 29,143 59,004
Payments received on account of orders 113,629 0 0
Trade payables 16,019 0 0
Other liabilities 10,756 0 0– thereof taxes (1,764) (0) (0)– thereof
social security (1,356) (0) (0)
Total for 2004 140,717 29,143 59,004
Total for 2003 122,101 25,564 67,696
(7) Equity
The breakdown of equity and minority interests is attached to the notes.
(8) Special reserve for subsidies or grants for the acquisition of fixed assets
A tax-allowable reserve was formed in 2000 containing the financing contri-bution made by the city of Frankfurt in relation to the exhibition centre car park.The special reserve is written back on a straight line basis over the usefullife of the car park.
(9) Other provisions
Other provisions mainly include outstanding purchase invoices, repairs and refurbishment, indemnification claims from agents employed abroadand claims from employees.
(10) Liabilities
1) For securitisation see text (12)
4➔
Management Report and Financial Statements Annual Financial Statements of the Messe Frankfurt GmbH Group
86 87
(11) Deferred income
The once-off payments received in advance in the years 1988 and 1996 for 35years respectively for two building leases and a payment for a 99-year jointusufruct in parts of buildings were recorded under Liabilities in Deferred in-come. The three partial amounts of the Deferred income are written down ona straight-line basis over the specified terms.
(12) Other financial commitments and contingent liabilities
Other financial commitments totalled e 86.891 million. These are primarily madeup of commitments relating to the purchase of land and from open purchaseorders related to investments and commitments relating to the acquisition ofadditional company shares.
In addition,Messe Frankfurt is required to pay annual ground rents of e 2.657 mil-lion. The ground rents have a remaining term of 68, 32 and 27 years respectively.
As security for the loan to an affiliated company, Messe Frankfurt GmbH hasissued a letter of comfort.
To cover the liability of an affiliated company, an amount of e 256,000 waslodged as security.
In connection with the conclusion of a cash pooling agreement within the MesseFrankfurt group, all participating companies – Messe Frankfurt GmbH (targetaccount), Messe Frankfurt Exhibition GmbH, Messe Frankfurt Venue GmbH &Co. KG, Messe Frankfurt Medien & Service GmbH, Accente Gastronomie ServiceGmbH and Messe Frankfurt Ausstellungen GmbH – have assumed a joint andseverable liability towards Commerzbank Aktiengesellschaft, Frankfurt am Main.The companies participating in the cash pooling assume liability only to theextent that they have themselves generated the liability balance and/or them-selves received the loan resulting from the overdraft. They are additionally liable to the extent that compliance with the assumed obligation to pay doesnot affect the assets required to maintain the share capital at the time of en-tering the payment obligation. The assumption of joint and several liability alsoapplies in the case that the accorded overdraft limit or credit line is exceeded.
Notes to the consolidated income statement
(Values in e ‘000 unless otherwise indicated)
(13) Sales
according to region 2004 2003
Germany 481,618 445,485
Europe (not incl. Germany) 16,391 16,032
Asia 37,978 23,671
America 19,284 16,526
555,271 501,714
of which intragroup –190,777 –148,404
364,494 353,310
(14) Other operating income
This account mainly includes revenue unrelated to the accounting period (e 11.359 million), relating in particular to the reversal of provisions and incomefrom the payment of written-off receivables as well as the pro rata temporiswrite-down of deferred income (e 2.099 million) and the special reserve forsubsidies or grants for the acquisition of fixed assets (e 2.147 million).
according to type 2004 2003
Stand rents 254,325 208,701
Halls, site and other rents 23,242 37,097
Entry fees and exhibitor fees 10,393 13,193
Services and other income 76,534 94,319
364,494 353,310
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Management Report and Financial Statements Annual Financial Statements of the Messe Frankfurt GmbH Group
88 89
(15) Event-related expenses
1) of whom 138 are in companies included on a pro rata basis
2004 2003
Cost of consumables and supplies and of goods purchased 6,644 13,938
Cost of purchased services 163,673 157,514
170,317 171,452
2004 2003
Wages and salaries 56,629 56,527
Social security post-employment and employee benefit costs 13,345 12,174
thereof in respect of old age pensions (3,691) (2,775)
69,974 68,701
Staff (annual average)
Heads of division 35 39
Other salaried employees1) 1,092 1,049
Wage-earning employees 59 61
1,186 1,149
The Cost of purchased services comprises in particular expenses for hall andsite rental, hall fitting, maintenance of the exhibition grounds and expensesfor public relations work.
(16) Personnel expenses
(17) Amortisation and depreciation of intangible assets and tangible assets
Where acquisition accounting resulted in goodwill, this was amortised on ascheduled basis in conformance with Section 309, Sub-section 1 HGB (Com-mercial Code) over the term of the relevant contract or over a useful life of 15years or on a non-scheduled basis at the recoverable amount on the balancesheet date. Amortisation and depreciation includes e 1.789 million in accor-dance with Section 7 Sub-section 5 of the EStG (Income Tax Law).
Due to a special building control of the administrative building by the city ofFrankfurt, a deduction for depreciation totalling e 14.947 million was madeon the lower of cost or recoverable value of the administrative building onthe balance sheet date.
(18) Other operating expenses
Apart from space rentals and office costs, other operating expenses princi-pally include legal, consulting and auditing costs, expenses for promotionalactivities and allowances for bad debts.
(19) Financial result
2004 2003
Interest and similar income 2,544 3,186
Interest and similar expenses 2,177 3,964
Expenses arising fromwrite-downs of securities classified as current assets 0 221
2,177 4,185
367 – 999
2004 2003
Taxes on income 14,023 13,055
Other taxes 3,024 3,120
17,047 16,175
(20) Taxes
4➔
Management Report and Financial Statements Annual Financial Statements of the Messe Frankfurt GmbH Group
90 91
Consolidated statement of changes in group fixed assets
of Messe Frankfurt GmbH
Acquisition and production costs
Values in e ‘000 Cost at Additions Disposals Transfers Cost at01.01.2004 31.12.2004
Intangible fixed assets
Concessions, industrial and similar rights and assets, and licences in such rights and assets 48,063 1,610 9,352 7 40,328
Goodwill arising from acquisition accounting 30,240 1,397 0 0 31,637
78,303 3,007 9,352 7 71,965
Tangible fixed assets
Land, land rights and buildings incl. buildings on third-party land 836,400 13,356 503 13,373 862,626
Technical equipment and machinery 69,558 2,860 704 729 72,443
Other equipment, operating and office equipment 72,177 5,866 4,372 33 73,704
Prepayments and assets under construction 15,760 9,349 957 –14,142 10,010
993,895 31,431 6,536 –7 1,018,783
Long-term financial assets
Other long-term equity investments 41 0 0 0 41
41 0 0 0 41
1,072,239 34,438 15,888 0 1,090,789
Cumulative depreciation, amortisations and write-downs Carrying amounts
at Additions Disposals Transfers at at at01.01.2004 31.12.2004 31.12.2004 31.12.2003
23,796 8,551 8,232 0 24,115 16,213 24,267
14,893 1,953 0 0 16,846 14,791 15,347
38,689 10,504 8,232 0 40,961 31,004 39,614
373,614 42,564 190 25 416,013 446,613 462,786
55,459 2,382 677 0 57,164 15,279 14,099
54,649 6,617 4,165 – 25 57,076 16,628 17,528
0 0 0 0 0 10,010 15,760
483,722 51,563 5,032 0 530,253 488,530 510,173
21 0 0 0 21 20 20
21 0 0 0 21 20 20
522,432 62,067 13,264 0 571,235 519,554 549,807
Other disclosures
Supervisory Board
The members of the Supervisory Board are listed on page 97.
Emoluments of the executive bodies of the company
In 2004, the members of the Board of Management received total remunera-tions of e 1.322 million, taking account of all declarable sums. Superannuationbenefits of e 502,000 were paid to former managing directors and survivingdependents. Pension provisions and provisions for other payment liabilities up to31 December 2004 were accumulated for the latter group of persons to a total ofe 8.549 million. The members of the Supervisory Board receive no emoluments.The expense allowance paid to them amounted to a total of e 6,000.
Board of Management
Detlef Braun, Graduate in Business Administration, Wiesbaden(from 1 October 2004)
Gerhard Gladitsch, businessman, Frankfurt am Main (until 31 March 2004)
Dr Michael Peters, Graduate in Business Studies, Wehrheim
Michael von Zitzewitz, Graduate in Economics, Kronberg
Frankfurt am Main, 5 April 2005
Michael von Zitzewitz Dr Michael Peters Detlef Braun
92 93
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Management Report and Financial Statements Annual Financial Statements of the Messe Frankfurt GmbH Group
Consolidated statement of changes in equity of
Messe Frankfurt group and minority interest
Values in e ‘000 Subscribed Capital Revenue Currency Net retained Group Minority Totalcapital reserves reserves translation profits equity interest
adjustments
Balance at 01.01.2003 180,000 85,219 1,102 – 2,454 47,257 311,124 1,158 312,282
Dividends paid – – – – – 6,492 – 6,492 –739 –7,231
Allocations to revenue reserves – – 6 – – 6 0 – 0
Changes in reporting entity structure – – – – 0 0 –78 –78
Currency adjustments – – – 1,169 –1,592 – 423 – – 423
Other changes – – –73 – – –73 – –73
Net income for the financial year – – – – 9,916 9,916 302 10,218
Balance at 01.01.2004 180,000 85,219 1,035 –1,285 49,083 314,052 643 314,695
Dividends paid – – – – –12,960 –12,960 –760 –13,720
Allocations to capital reserves – 2,000 – – –2,000 0 – 0
Withdrawals from revenue reserves – – –22,200 – 22,200 0 – 0
Allocations to revenue reserves – – 61,379 – –61,379 0 – 0
Currency adjustments – – – –1,260 587 – 673 15 – 658
Other changes – – – – – 0 – 227 – 227
Net income for thefinancial year – – – – 18,149 18,149 1,286 19,435
Balance at 31.12.2004 180,000 87,219 40,214 – 2,545 13,680 318,568 957 319,525
94 95
4➔
Management Report and Financial Statements
Our audit did not lead to any objections.
In our opinion, the consolidated annual financial statements give a true andfair view of the net assets, financial position and results of group operationsin accordance with generally accepted accounting principles. On the whole,the group management report provides an accurate understanding of thegroup’s position and accurately presents the risks of future development.
Frankfurt am Main, 27 May 2005
BDO Deutsche WarentreuhandAktiengesellschaftAuditors
Simon-Heckroth RudolphAuditor Auditor
Auditor’s report
We have examined the consolidated financial statements prepared by MesseFrankfurt GmbH, comprising the balance sheet, income statement andnotes, and the consolidated management report for the financial year from1 January 2004 to 31 December 2004. The preparation of the consolidated financial statements and the management report in compliance with theprovisions set forth under German commercial law is the responsibility of thecompany’s legal representatives. Our responsibility is to express an opinionon the consolidated financial statements and the group management reportbased on our audit.
We conducted our audit of the consolidated financial statements in accordancewith Section 317 HGB (German Commercial Code) and the generally acceptedaccounting principles for the audit of financial statements promulgated by theInstitut der Wirtschaftsprüfer (IDW) (Institute of German Independent Auditors).Those standards require that we plan and perform the audit such that misstate-ments and irregularities having a material effect on the presentation of the netassets, financial position and results of operations as conveyed by the consol-idated financial statements in compliance with generally accepted accountingprinciples and by the group management report can be detected with reason-able assurance. In determining the audit procedures, the auditor’s understand-ing of the business activity and the economic and legal environment of the group,as well as evaluations of possible misstatements, are taken into account. Theaudit examines, primarily on a test basis, the effectiveness of the accounting-related internal control system and evidence supporting the amounts and dis-closures in the consolidated year-end financial statements and the group man-agement report. The audit includes assessing the annual financial statements ofthe companies included in the consolidated financial statements, the definition ofthe reporting entity structure, the accounting and consolidation policies appliedand material estimates made by the legal representatives, as well as evaluatingthe overall presentation of the consolidated financial statements and the groupmanagement report. We believe that our audit provides a reasonable basis forour opinion.
96 97
4➔
Management Report and Financial Statements
Thomas Kastl
Director, Messe Frankfurt GmbH,Seligenstadt
Dr Gerhard Kurtze
Former chairman of the Börsenvereinsdes Deutschen Buchhandels e.V.(stock exchange members’ associationof German Booksellers), Hamburg
Sven Kusnik
Electrical energy engineer,Messe Frankfurt GmbH,Frankfurt am Main
Ulrike Lübbring
Project manageress, Messe Frankfurt GmbH, Frankfurt am Main
Klaus J. Maack
CEO of ERCO Leuchten GmbH, Lüdenscheid
Fritz Wilhelm Pahl
Diplom-Ingenieur, managing partnerBette GmbH & Co. KG,Delbrück
Franz Porstner
Project manager, Messe Frankfurt GmbH, Gründau
Supervisory Board Messe Frankfurt GmbH
Petra Roth
ChairpersonPresiding mayor of the city of Frankfurt am Main, Frankfurt am Main
Dr Alois Rhiel
Vice-chairpersonMinister for Economics, Transportand State Development for Hesse,Wiesbaden
Volker Bouffier
Minister of the Interior and Sportfor the State of Hesse, Wiesbaden
Josef A. Beckmann
CEO IBENA TextilwerkeBeckmann GmbH, Bocholt
Wendelin von Boch
Managing Director ofVilleroy & Boch AG, Mettlach
Horst Förster
Director, Messe Frankfurt GmbH,Wiesbaden
Horst Hemzal
City treasurer of the city of Frankfurtam Main, Frankfurt am Main
Peter Saalmüller
Director, Messe Frankfurt GmbH,Idstein
Edwin Schwarz
Member of the city council of the city ofFrankfurt am Main, Frankfurt am Main
Lutz Sikorski
Councillor of the city of Frankfurtam Main, Frankfurt am Main
Joachim Vandreike
Mayor of the city of Frankfurt am Main,Frankfurt am Main
Karlheinz Weimar
Minister for Finance of the State ofHesse, Wiesbaden
Jürgen Weis
Dipl. Designer, director,Messe Frankfurt GmbH, Wiesbaden
Detlef Wittig
Member of the brand managementboard, Volkswagen Skoda Auto a.s.,Lada Boleslav
Report of the Supervisory Board
During the course of the financial year, the Supervisory Board of Messe FrankfurtGmbH informed itself of the company’s position in regular meetings with theBoard of Management as well as through written or oral reports and discussedimportant issues with the Board.
The Supervisory Board has examined the annual financial statements andconsolidated annual financial statements of Messe Frankfurt at 31 December2004 for the financial year from 1 January to 31 December 2004, as well asthe reports of the Board of Management on the position of the company andthe group for the 2004 financial year, which have been audited and issued anunqualified opinion by the auditing company BDO Deutsche WarentreuhandAktiengesellschaft.
It recommends that the Annual General Meeting should approve the annualfinancial statements and consolidated annual financial statements of MesseFrankfurt GmbH as at 31 December 2004 and adopt the reports on the posi-tion of the company and the group for the financial year from 1 January to31 December 2004.
Frankfurt am Main, 30 June 2005
The Supervisory Board
pp Petra Roth
9998
January
Hong Kong International Stationery
Fair, Hong Kong
06.01.–09.01.2004Heimtextil, Frankfurt am Main
14.01.–17.01.2004Heimtextil Sunday, Frankfurt am Main
18.01.2004Intersec, Dubai
25.01.–27.01.2004Paperworld, Frankfurt am Main
31.01.–04.02.2004Christmasworld, Frankfurt am Main
31.01.–04.02.2004
February
EMV, Düsseldorf
10.02.–12.02.2004Ambiente, Frankfurt am Main
20.02.–24.02.2004Texworld Spring, Paris
24.02.–27.02.2004Intima America, New York
29.02.–02.03.2004
March
International Frankfurt Beauty Week,
Frankfurt am Main
05.03.–08.03.2004• Beautyworld
• Lifetime
• Passione
• Cosmetica
Top Hair Event, Frankfurt am Main
07.03.2004Ambiente, Buenos Aires
11.03.–14.03.2004FUR & FASHION, Frankfurt am Main
11.03.–14.03.2004Interstoff Asia Spring, Hong Kong
23.03.–25.03.2004Source It, Hong Kong
23.03.–25.03.2004
Techtextil North America, Atlanta
30.03.–01.04.2004Intertextile Beijing Spring, Beijing
31.03.–02.04.2004Musikmesse, Frankfurt am Main
31.03.–03.04.2004Prolight + Sound, Frankfurt am Main
31.03.–03.04.2004Yarn Expo, Beijing
31.03.–02.04.2004
April
handarbeit & hobby, Cologne
02.04.–04.04.2004International Window Coverings
Expo, Baltimore
15.04.–17.04.2004Light + Building, Frankfurt am Main
18.04.–22.04.2004Public Design, Frankfurt am Main
18.04.–22.04.2004Beautyworld Middle East/Gulf
Beauty, Dubai
26.04.–28.04.2004
May
Art Frankfurt, Frankfurt am Main
07.05.–10.05.2004Marketing Services, Hamburg
12.05.–14.05.2004IMEX, Frankfurt am Main
12.05.–14.05.2004IFFA/IFFA-Delicat, Frankfurt am Main
15.05.–20.05.2004Middle East Toy Fair, Dubai
16.05.–18.05.2004Housewares & Hometech Middle
East, Dubai
16.05.–19.05.2004Hardware & Tools, Dubai
16.05.–19.05.2004
ISH Kitchen + Bathroom Gulf, Dubai
16.05.–19.05.2004Lightstyle Gulf Light, Dubai
16.05.–19.05.2004GardenX, Dubai
16.05.–19.05.2004Windows & Doors, Dubai
16.05.–19.05.2004Beautyworld Japan, Tokyo
17.05.–19.05.2004Intima Japan, Tokyo
17.05.–19.05.2004Seoul International Consumer Goods
Fair, Seoul
19.05.–22.05.2004Automechanika Gulf, Dubai
23.05.–26.05.2004Media-Tech Expo, Frankfurt am Main
25.05.–27.05.2004PCIM Europe, Nuremberg
25.05.–27.05.2004
June
Gerontologica, Wiesbaden
02.06.–05.06.2004Texcare International,
Frankfurt am Main
06.06.–10.06.2004Guangzhou International Lighting
Exhibition + Electrical Building
Technology China, Guangzhou
09.06.–12.06.2004SMT/HYBRID/PACKAGING,
Nuremberg
15.06.–17.06.2004Facility Management, Düsseldorf
15.06.–17.06.2004IT-Forum der Sparkasseninformatik,
Frankfurt am Main
15.06.–17.06.2004ABF Franchising Expo, São Paulo
16.06.–19.06.2004
Trade fairs in 2004
5➔
European Banking & Insurance Fair,
Frankfurt am Main
26.10.–28.10.2004Intertextile Shanghai, Shanghai
26.10.–29.10.2004Auto + Automechanika St. Petersburg,
St. Petersburg
27.10.–31.10.2004
November
Automechanika Argentina,
Buenos Aires
17.11.–20.11.2004Expo Transporte, Guadalajara
17.11.–19.11.2004SPS/IPC/DRIVES, Nuremberg
23.11.–25.11.2004
December
Auto South China, Guangzhou
02.–04.12.2004turntec, Frankfurt am Main
01.12.–04.12.2004EuroMold, Frankfurt am Main
01.12.–04.12.2004Automechanika Shanghai,
Shanghai
02.12.–04.12.2004export21, Frankfurt am Main
07.12.–08.12.2004
At: 30.04.2004
100
Trade fairs in 2004
Optatec, Frankfurt am Main
22.06.–25.06.2004Interior Lifestyle, Tokyo
23.06.–25.06.2004• Ambiente Japan
• Heimtextil Japan
• Home Design Japan
ITeG, Frankfurt am Main
23.06.–25.06.2004
July
PAACE Automechanika Mexico,
Mexico City
14.07.–16.07.2004APS/SC, Tokyo
21.07.–23.07.2004
August
Intima America, New York
01.08.–03.08.2004Ambientar, Buenos Aires
12.08.–15.08.2004Scantech, São Paulo
15.08.–20.08.2004Comdex Sucesu-SP, São Paulo
17.08.–21.08.2004Tendence Lifestyle,
Frankfurt am Main
27.08.–31.08.2004
September
Cinte Techtextil China, Shanghai
01.09.–03.09.2004Intertextile Shanghai Home Textiles,
Shanghai
01.09.–03.09.2004Euro Fed Lipid Congress, Edinburgh
05.09.–08.09.2004ISH China, Beijing
14.09.–17.09.2004Automechanika, Frankfurt am Main
14.09.–19.09.2004
Fehab - Anamaco, São Paulo
21.09.–25.09.2004Tecno Fidta, Buenos Aires
21.09.–24.09.2004Texworld Autumn, Paris
21.09.–24.09.2004Heimtextil Rossija, Moscow
22.09.–25.09.2004Christmasworld Rossija, Moscow
22.09.–25.09.2004Ambiente Rossija, Moscow
22.09.–25.09.2004Passage Asia, Moscow
22.09.–25.09.2004EMT, Mexico City
23.09.–25.09.2004Licensing Forum, Munich
23.09–24.09.2004
October
Wireless Technologies, Sindelfingen
05.10.–06.10.2004Frankfurt Book Fair,
Frankfurt am Main
06.10.–10.10.2004Interstoff Asia Autumn, Hong Kong
06.10.–08.10.2004Heimtextil India, New Delhi
10.10.–13.10.2004ISH North America, Las Vegas
14.10.–16.10.2004ACS, Frankfurt am Main
20.10.–22.10.2004Music China, Shanghai
20.10.–23.10.2004Prolight + Sound Shanghai, Shanghai
20.10.–23.10.2004Pro Sign, Frankfurt am Main
21.10.–23.10.2004LinuxWorld Conference & Expo 2004,
Frankfurt am Main
26.10.–28.10.2004
Guadalajara
Trade fair venues worldwide
Las Vegas
São Paulo
Mexico City
Buenos Aires
Atlanta
New York
Vancouver
Paris
Frankfurt
AugsburgDüsseldorf
HamburgKarlsruhe
CologneMainz
MunichNuremberg
OffenbachSindelfingen
StuttgartWiesbaden
St. Petersburg
Moscow
Abu Dhabi
New Delhi
Beijing
SeoulTokyo
Shanghai
GuangzhouHong Kong
Chicago
Baltimore
EdinburghToronto
Istanbul
Dubai
Mumbai
Kuala Lumpur
Nagoya
Busan
Chiba
Guangzhou International Lighting
Exhibition + Electrical Building
Technology China 2005, Guangzhou
08.06.–11.06.2005Ambiente Japan, Tokyo
08.06.–10.06.2005Heimtextil Japan, Tokyo
08.06.–10.06.2005Interior Lifestyle, Tokyo
08.06.–10.06.2005ABF Franchising Expo, São Paulo
08.06.–11.06.2005Collectione, Frankfurt am Main
12.06.–15.06.2005bed and more, Frankfurt am Main
14.06.–15.06.2005Parken 2005, Wiesbaden
15.06.–16.06.2005SEGURIEXPO, Buenos Aires
21.06.–23.06.2005Expo Forestal, Guadalajara
30.06.–02.07.2005
July
PAACE Automechanika Mexico,
Mexico City
13.07.–15.07.2005Thermotec, Tokyo
13.07.–15.07.2005Interior Lifestyle USA, Las Vegas
26.07.–29.07.2005Ambiente USA, Las Vegas
26.07.–29.07.2005Heimtextil USA, Las Vegas
26.07.–29.07.2005
August
SIM 2005, São Paulo
01.08.–05.08.2005Fenavem, São Paulo
01.08.–05.08.2005IT Brasil, São Paulo
16.08.–19.08.2005Ambiente Buenos Aires,
Buenos Aires
18.08.–21.08.2005
Intertextile Shanghai Home Textiles,
Shanghai
23.08.–25.08.2005Tendence Lifestyle,
Frankfurt am Main
26.08.-30.08.2005
September
Expo Ferretera, Buenos Aires
01.09.–04.09.2005EMT, Mexico City
06.09.–08.09.2005Techtextil Rossija, Moscow
07.09.–09.09.2005Interstoff Rossija, Moscow
07.09.–09.09.2005IAA, Frankfurt am Main
15.09.–25.09.2005Cosmesur, Buenos Aires
16.09.–19.09.2005Texworld, Paris
19.09.–22.09.2005Ambiente Rossija, Moscow
21.09.–24.09.2005Christmasworld Rossija, Moscow
21.09.–24.09.2005Heimtextil Rossija, Moscow
21.09.–24.09.2005
October
Media-Tech Showcase & Conference,
Frankfurt am Main
04.10.–05.10.2005Plastic Electronics International
Conference & Showcase,
Frankfurt am Main
04.10.–05.10.2005Interstoff Asia Autumn, Hong Kong
05.10.–07.10.2005Heimtextil India, Mumbai
10.10.–13.10.2005Music China, Shanghai
19.10.–22.10.2005Prolight + Sound Shanghai, Shanghai
19.10.–22.10.2005Frankfurt Book Fair,
Frankfurt am Main
19.10.–23.10.2005
Canadian Waste & Recycling Expo,
Vancouver
26.10.–27.10.2005Auto + Automechanika
St. Petersburg, St. Petersburg
26.10.–30.10.2005Intertextile Shanghai Apparel
Fabrics, Shanghai
27.10.–29.10.2005Marathon Mall, Frankfurt am Main
28.10.–30.10.2005
November/December
BIEL Light + Building, Buenos Aires
01.11.–05.11.2005Eurolipids, Frankfurt am Main
02.11.–04.11.2005Paperworld USA, Las Vegas
09.11.–11.11.2005Texcare Asia, Beijing
10.11.–12.11.2005Material Vision, Frankfurt am Main
10.11.–11.11.2005Product Life, Mainz
15.–16.11.2005Linux World Conference & Expo,
Frankfurt am Main
15.11.–17.11.2005European Banking & Insurance Fair,
Frankfurt am Main
15.11.–17.11.2005Paperworld China, Shanghai
15.11.–17.11.2005Expo Transporte, Guadalajara
16.11.–18.11.2005Techtextil South America, São Paulo
22.11.–24.11.2005SPS/IPC/Drives, Nuremberg
22.11.–24.11.2005Automechanika China, Beijing
23.11.–26.11.2005EuroMold, Frankfurt am Main
30.11.–03.12.2005turntec, Frankfurt am Main
30.11.–03.12.2005
At: 30.04.2005
January
Hong Kong International Stationery
Fair, Hong Kong
11.01.–14.01.2005Heimtextil, Frankfurt am Main
12.01.–15.01.2005Intersec, Dubai
15.01.–17.01.2005Paperworld, Frankfurt am Main
26.01.–30.01.2005Christmasworld, Frankfurt am Main
26.01.–30.01.2005Beautyworld, Frankfurt am Main
26.01.–30.01.2005
February
Ambiente, Frankfurt am Main
11.02.–15.02.2005Hardware + Home Improvement
Expo & Conference, Toronto
20.02.–22.02.2005Personal 2005, Frankfurt am Main
23.02.–24.02.2005Extruma, Frankfurt am Main
23.02.–25.02.2005
March
Texworld, Paris
08.03.–11.03.2005Fur & Fashion, Frankfurt am Main
09.03.–12.03.2005Ambiente Buenos Aires, Buenos Aires
10.03.–13.03.2005ISH, Frankfurt am Main
15.03.–19.03.2005EMV, Stuttgart
15.03.–17.03.2005PCIM, Shanghai
15.03.–17.03.2005Lifetime Kongress,
Frankfurt am Main
17.03.–19.03.2005Interstoff Asia Spring, Hong Kong
21.03.–23.03.2005
Source It, Hong Kong
21.03.–23.03.2005Yarn Expo, Beijing
29.03.–31.03.2005Intertextile Beijing Apparel Fabrics,
Beijing
30.03.–01.04.2005
April
Automechanika Asia, Kuala Lumpur
06.04.–09.04.2005Musikmesse, Frankfurt am Main
06.04.–09.04.2005Prolight + Sound, Frankfurt am Main
06.04–09.04.2005Construct Light+Building, Abu Dhabi
10.04.–13.03.2005IMEX, Frankfurt am Main
19.04.–21.04.2005Facility Management,
Frankfurt am Main
19.04.–21.04.2005SMT/Hybrid/Packaging, Nuremberg
19.04.–21.04.2005Automechanika Istanbul, Istanbul
21.04.–24.04.2005Petroleum Istanbul, Istanbul
21.04.–24.04.2005ITeG, Frankfurt am Main
26.04.–28.04.2005Art Frankfurt, Frankfurt am Main
29.04.–02.05.2005
May
Beauty World Middle East Gulf
Beauty, Dubai
02.05.–04.05.2005Wellness & Spa Middle East, Dubai
02.05.–04.05.2005Seoul International Consumer Goods
Fair, Seoul
04.05.–07.05.2005Beautyworld Japan, Tokyo
09.05.–11.05.2005
Intima Japan, Tokyo
09.05.–11.05.2005Marketing Services,
Frankfurt am Main
10.05.–12.05.2005Media-Tech Expo, Las Vegas
10.05.–11.05.2005Materials Handling, Dubai
15.05.–17.05.2005ISH Kitchen + Bathroom Gulf,
Dubai
15.05.–17.05.2005Lightstyle Gulf Light, Dubai
15.05.–17.05.2005Garden, Landscaping & Outdoor
Living, Dubai
15.05.–17.05.2005Hardware & Tools, Dubai
15.05.–17.05.2005Hometech, Dubai
15.05.–17.05.2005Hair & Beauty International,
Frankfurt am Main
22.05.–23.05.2005SPS Electric Automation America,
Chicago
24.05.–26.05.2005Automechanika Gulf, Dubai
28.05.–30.05.2005Housewares & Homestyle Middle
East, Dubai
28.05.–30.05.2005Middle East Toy Fair, Dubai
28.05.–30.05.2005
June
Techtextil, Frankfurt am Main
07.06.–09.06.2005Avantex, Frankfurt am Main
07.06.–09.06.2005PCIM, Nuremberg
07.06.–09.06.2005Korean Railways & Logistics Fair,
Busan
08.06.–11.06.2005
Trade fairs in 2005
Mes
se F
rank
furt
An
nu
al
Re
po
rt 2
00
4
Messe Frankfurt GmbHLudwig-Erhard-Anlage 160327 Frankfurt am MainGermany
Telephone +49 69 75 75-0Telefax +49 69 75 75-64 33www.messefrankfurt.cominfo@messefrankfurt.com
Imprint
Editors-in-chief
Klaus Münster-Müller Gabriele Wehrl
Editor
Ralf Schirrmann
Responsible for content
Dr Jens Schreiber
Translation
Jan Wheeler B.A. (Hons) BDÜ,Saarbrücken
Photography
Norbert Miguletz
With the exception of the photos on pages:Vincenzo Mancuso: 4, 5Messe Frankfurt GmbH: 21, 29, 35
Concept and design
thema communications ag,Frankfurt am Main
Publisher
Messe Frankfurt Medien undService GmbH, Frankfurt am Main
Druckhaus BeckerOber-Ramstadt
Paper
Inside pages: Curtis by Curtis 1.3, 135 g/m2
Cover: Curtis by Curtis 1.3, 360 g/m2
von Römerturm Feinstpapier
Print run
2,500 in two editions (German and English)
Editorial team address
Messe Frankfurt GmbHCorporate PublishingLudwig-Erhard-Anlage 160327 Frankfurt am MainGermanyTelephone +49 69 75 75-56 25Telefax +49 69 75 75-67 60press@messefrankfurt.com
Messe Frankfurt group at a glance
Shareholders: City of Frankfurt (60%), State of Hesse (40%)
Subscribed capital: City of Frankfurt e 108 m, State of Hesse e 72 m
in g m 2000 2001 2002 2003 2004
Sales 311 318 335 353 364
Personnel expenses 45 52 58 69 70
Depreciation, amortisation and write-downs 30 45 47 47 62
Earnings before taxes 46 40 32 23 33
Pre-tax return on sales in % 15 13 10 7 9
Net income for the year 22 28 22 10 19
Cash flow 52 65 67 53 78
Additions to fixed assets 188 138 43 40 34
Equity 283 299 312 315 320
Total assets 691 701 789 706 732
Employees (at 31.12. respectively) 851 984 1,144 1,213 1,227
2000 2001 2002 2003 2004
Basic data
Total area (m2) 475,000 475,000 475,000 475,000 475,000
Available covered space (m2) 289,931 324,023 324,041 324,225 324,277
Available open space (m2) 75,762 89,408 83,163 83,163 83,163
Number of halls 10 10 10 10 10
Events in Germany
Number of trade fairs and exhibitions 46 38 51 52 50
Exhibitors (total) 43,088 36,089 39,777 45,220 42,231
Exhibitors (Germany) 20,529 16,985 17,240 19,619 17,031
Exhibitors (foreign) 22,559 19,104 22,537 25,601 25,200
Visitors 1,680,255 2,185,817 1,609,107 2,713,619 1,586,766
Net area (m2) 1,612,502 1,443,596 1,428,555 1,616,859 1,417,486
Events overseas
Number of trade fairs 43 48 45 60 59
Exhibitors 7,136 7,412 9,812 13,345 15,486
Visitors 609,532 584,085 803,527 760,746 750,330
Net area (m2) 176,264 196,041 217,993 293,572 322,736
Corporate Group
The Messe Frankfurt corporate group conceives, plans and hosts trade fairsand exhibitions in Germany and abroad. The parent company and its sub-sidiaries offer a well-coordinated service package for national and interna-tional customers, exhibitors and visitors.
Annual Report 2004
We make markets. Worldwide.
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